| Literature DB >> 28529533 |
Almudena Crooke1, Juan Martínez-Henández2, Joaquín Martínez-López3, Alfonso Cruz-Jentoft4, Fernando Huete-Toral1, Jesús Pintor1.
Abstract
Ageing involves a progressive decline of the body's regulatory systems including immune system. Adenosine regulates immune function by interaction with its receptors, mainly adenosine A2A receptor, present on the surface of immune cells. Furthermore, cellular response to this nucleoside is highly dependent on its extracellular concentration that is regulated by ecto-enzymes such as CD39 and CD73. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the effect of age on adenosine A2A receptor, CD39 and CD73 gene expression. Changes in mRNA were measured by quantitative PCR from peripheral blood of young, middle-aged and older adults as well as centenarians. Centenarians showed a prominent decrease of CD39 and CD73 mRNA in comparison with older adults. Regarding to adenosine A2A receptor, we detected two subgroups of centenarians with high and low level of transcript. Additionally, adenosine A2A receptor mRNA level of centenarians, did not correlate with their cognitive impairment. In summary, our pilot study suggests that unlike of adenosine A2A receptor, the level of CD39 as well as CD73 mRNA could be a hallmark of successful human ageing.Entities:
Keywords: Adenosine receptor; Ageing; Centenarian; Ecto-nucleotidase
Year: 2017 PMID: 28529533 PMCID: PMC5437401 DOI: 10.1186/s12979-017-0094-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immun Ageing ISSN: 1742-4933 Impact factor: 6.400
Fig. 1Effect of ageing on CD39 and CD73 gene expression in human peripheral blood cells. Quantification of CD39 (a) and CD73 (b) mRNA fold change in cells of young, middle-aged and older adults as well as centenarians. Gene expression level data for each gene and sample were normalized to ACTB signal (internal control) and relative to the mean normalized value of CD39/CD73 gene expression in young adults group. Error bars represent S.E.M. of the means obtained in each group (n = 13 per young adults and centenarians; n = 12 per middle-aged adults and n = 11 per older adults group). a: *** indicates statistically significant differences (p < 0.001) between older adults and the rest of groups. b: **** denotes highly significant differences (p < 0.0001) between older adults and the rest of groups; # # and # # # mean significant differences (p < 0.01 and p < 0.001, respectively) between groups linked by horizontal square brackets. The p values were determined by Mann–Whitney test
Fig. 2Effect of ageing on ADORA2A gene expression in human peripheral blood cells. a Quantification of ADORA2A mRNA fold change in cells of young, middle-aged and older adults as well as centenarians. ADORA2A mRNA level for each sample was normalized to ACTB signal (internal control) and relative to the mean normalized value of ADORA2A gene expression in young adults group. Error bars represent S.E.M. of the means obtained in each group (n = 13 per young adults; n = 12 per middle-aged adults; n = 11 per older adults; n = 21 per centenarian group). ** (p < 0.01) and **** (p < 0.0001) indicate statistically significant differences between older adults and the rest of groups. b ADORA2A mRNA fold change in different subgroups of a centenarians. ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ (p < 0.0001) indicates significant differences between centenarian’s subgroups, overexpressed (n = 7) and underexpressed (n = 14). # # # (p < 0.001) and # # # # (p < 0.0001) denote highly significant differences between the subgroup of overexpressed centenarians and young as well as middle-aged adults groups of a, respectively. ♦ (p < 0.05) and ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ (p < 0.0001) mean statistical differences between the subgroup of underexpressed centenarians and the rest of groups of a. The p values were determined by Mann–Whitney test
Proportion of cognitive impairment in centenarian subgroups
| Mental status | Overexpressed, % (n) | Underexpressed, % (n) |
|---|---|---|
| Intact intellectual functioning (0–2 errors) | 14.3 (1) | 38.5 (5) |
| Mild intellectual impairment (3–4 errors) | 0.0 (0) | 23.1 (3) |
| Moderate intellectual impairment (5–7 errors) | 57.1 (4) | 7.7 (1) |
| Severe intellectual impairment (8–10 errors) | 28.6 (2) | 30.8 (4) |
Mental status was determined by the Spanish version of the Pfeiffer’s test [7]. p = 0.073, Chi-square test