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N-glycomic biomarkers of biological aging and longevity: A link with inflammaging

Journal

AGEING RESEARCH REVIEWS
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 685-698

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.arr.2012.02.002

Keywords

Inflammaging; Glycosylation; Autoimmune disease; Rheumatoid arthritis; Antibody glycosylation; High-throughput glycomic analysis

Funding

  1. European Union [200880, 266486, 259679, 278535]
  2. MIUR

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Glycosylation is a frequent co/post-translational modification of proteins which modulates a variety of biological functions. The analysis of N-glycome, i.e. the sugar chains N-linked to asparagine, identified new candidate biomarkers of aging such as N-glycans devoid of galactose residues on their branches, in a variety of human and experimental model systems, such as healthy old people, centenarians and their offspring and caloric restricted mice. These agalactosylated biantennary structures mainly decorate Asn297 of Fc portion of IgG (IgG-G0), and are present also in patients affected by progeroid syndromes and a variety of autoimmune/inflammatory diseases. IgG-G0 exert a pro-inflammatory effect through different mechanisms, including the lectin pathway of complement, binding to Fey receptors and formation of autoantibody aggregates. The age-related accumulation of IgG-G0 can contribute to inflammaging, the low-grade pro-inflammatory status that characterizes elderly, by creating a vicious loop in which inflammation is responsible for the production of aberrantly glycosylated IgG which, in turn, would activate the immune system, exacerbating inflammation. Moreover, recent data suggest that the N-glycomic shift observed in aging could be related not only to inflammation but also to alteration of important metabolic pathways. Thus, altered N-glycans are both powerful markers of aging and possible contributors to its pathogenesis. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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