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Immune resilience despite inflammatory stress promotes longevity and favorable health outcomes including resistance to infection

Authors :
Sunil K. Ahuja
Muthu Saravanan Manoharan
Grace C. Lee
Lyle R. McKinnon
Justin A. Meunier
Maristella Steri
Nathan Harper
Edoardo Fiorillo
Alisha M. Smith
Marcos I. Restrepo
Anne P. Branum
Matthew J. Bottomley
Valeria OrrĂ¹
Fabio Jimenez
Andrew Carrillo
Lavanya Pandranki
Caitlyn A. Winter
Lauryn A. Winter
Alvaro A. Gaitan
Alvaro G. Moreira
Elizabeth A. Walter
Guido Silvestri
Christopher L. King
Yong-Tang Zheng
Hong-Yi Zheng
Joshua Kimani
T. Blake Ball
Francis A. Plummer
Keith R. Fowke
Paul N. Harden
Kathryn J. Wood
Martin T. Ferris
Jennifer M. Lund
Mark T. Heise
Nigel Garrett
Kristen R. Canady
Salim S. Abdool Karim
Susan J. Little
Sara Gianella
Davey M. Smith
Scott Letendre
Douglas D. Richman
Francesco Cucca
Hanh Trinh
Sandra Sanchez-Reilly
Joan M. Hecht
Jose A. Cadena Zuluaga
Antonio Anzueto
Jacqueline A. Pugh
South Texas Veterans Health Care System COVID-19 team
Brian K. Agan
Robert Root-Bernstein
Robert A. Clark
Jason F. Okulicz
Weijing He
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-31 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Some people remain healthier throughout life than others but the underlying reasons are poorly understood. Here we hypothesize this advantage is attributable in part to optimal immune resilience (IR), defined as the capacity to preserve and/or rapidly restore immune functions that promote disease resistance (immunocompetence) and control inflammation in infectious diseases as well as other causes of inflammatory stress. We gauge IR levels with two distinct peripheral blood metrics that quantify the balance between (i) CD8+ and CD4+ T-cell levels and (ii) gene expression signatures tracking longevity-associated immunocompetence and mortality-associated inflammation. Profiles of IR metrics in ~48,500 individuals collectively indicate that some persons resist degradation of IR both during aging and when challenged with varied inflammatory stressors. With this resistance, preservation of optimal IR tracked (i) a lower risk of HIV acquisition, AIDS development, symptomatic influenza infection, and recurrent skin cancer; (ii) survival during COVID-19 and sepsis; and (iii) longevity. IR degradation is potentially reversible by decreasing inflammatory stress. Overall, we show that optimal IR is a trait observed across the age spectrum, more common in females, and aligned with a specific immunocompetence-inflammation balance linked to favorable immunity-dependent health outcomes. IR metrics and mechanisms have utility both as biomarkers for measuring immune health and for improving health outcomes.

Subjects

Subjects :
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2d05c47c46834fc38503fbfb37c7eb1f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38238-6