1. Interleukin-8 and interleukin-10, brain volume and microstructure, and the influence of calorie restriction in old rhesus macaques
- Author
-
Sterling C. Johnson, Christopher L. Coe, Auriel A. Willette, Andrew L. Alexander, Barbara B. Bendlin, Richard Weindruch, David B. Allison, Ricki J. Colman, and Alex C. Birdsill
- Subjects
Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Calorie restriction ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Hippocampal formation ,Biology ,Systemic inflammation ,Article ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,White matter ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Prefrontal cortex ,Caloric Restriction ,Interleukin-8 ,Brain ,Organ Size ,General Medicine ,Macaca mulatta ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Interleukin-10 ,Interleukin 10 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Brain size ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Higher systemic levels of the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) were found to be associated with lower gray matter volume and tissue density in old rhesus macaques. This association between IL-6, and these brain indices were attenuated by long-term 30 % calorie restriction (CR). To extend these findings, the current analysis determined if a CR diet in 27 aged rhesus monkeys compared to 17 normally fed controls reduced circulating levels of another proinflammatory cytokine, interleukin-8 (IL-8), and raised levels of anti-inflammatory interleukin-10 (IL-10). Further, these cytokines were regressed onto imaged brain volume and microstructure using voxel-wise regression analyses. CR significantly lowered IL-8 and raised IL-10 levels. Across the two dietary conditions, higher IL-8 predicted smaller gray matter volumes in bilateral hippocampus. Higher IL-10 was associated with more white matter volume in visual areas and tracts. Consuming a CR diet reduced the association between systemic IL-8 and hippocampal volumes. Conversely, CR strengthened associations between IL-10 and microstructural tissue density in the prefrontal cortex and other areas, particularly in a region of dorsal prefrontal cortex, which concurred with our prior findings for IL-6. Consumption of a CR diet lowered proinflammatory and increased anti-inflammatory cytokine concentrations, which lessened the statistical association between systemic inflammation and the age-related alterations in important brain regions, including the hippocampus.
- Published
- 2013