| Literature DB >> 28709450 |
Abstract
Chronic inflammation represents one of the most consistent biologic features of aging. However, the precise etiology of persistent low-grade increases in inflammation remains unclear. Recent evidence suggests that the gut microbiome may play a key role in age-related inflammation. Indeed, several studies have indicated that older adults display an altered composition of the gut microbiota, and early evidence indicates that this dysbiosis is associated with the presence of several key circulating inflammatory analytes. The present review summarizes knowledge on age-related inflammation and discusses how potential relationships with gut dysbiosis may lead to novel treatment strategies in the future."The pattern of disease is an expression of the response of man to his total environment (physical, biological, and social); this response is, therefore, determined by anything that affects man himself or his environment." - Rene Dubos, 1961.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28709450 PMCID: PMC5512975 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-017-0296-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1Number of PubMed citations by year using the search term “aging and inflammation”
Fig. 2a Prominent health conditions with both biologic age and chronic inflammation as central risk factors. b Prominent health conditions with evidence linking them to gut dysbiosis. Note the similarities between the conditions associated with aging and inflammation and those associated with gut dysbiosis
Studies investigating aging and the gut microbiome humans
| Study |
| Population | Age | Age-affected microbiota | Age effect | Additional details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hopkins et al. (2002) [ | 15 | British | 21–34 years | Bacteroides species diversity |
| CDAD patients had greater diversity lactobacilli/clostridia but reducted bacteriodes, prevotella, and bifidobacteria |
| Hayashi et al. (2003) [ | 6 | Japanese | 79–84 yearsa | Clostridium rRNA subcluster XIVa |
| |
| Woodmansey et al. (2004) [ | 28 | British | 19–35 years | Bacterioides |
| Hospitalized patients displayed age-related changes along with increased proteolytic bacteria no. and diversity |
| Van Tongeren et al. (2005) [ | 23 | Dutch | 70–100 years | N/A | N/A | High frailty scores associated with reduced lactobacilli, bacteroides, prevotella no.; increased enterobacteria |
| Biagi et al. (2010) [ | 84 | Italian | 25–40 years | Clostridium cluster XIVa |
| Young and elderly showed similar microbiota, while differences observed in centenarians only. |
| Claesson et al. (2011) [ | 170 | Irish | 28–46 years | Firmicutes |
| |
| Claesson et al. (2012) [ | 191 | Irish | 28–46 years | N/A | N/A | Microbiota composition clustered by diet and residence location + significantly correlated with frailty, co-morbidity, and inflammation |
| Rampelli et al. (2013) [ | 9 | Italian | 38–102 years | Bacterial DNA gene expression for: |
| |
| Jeffery et al. (2016) [ | 371 | Irish | 64–102 years | N/A | N/A | Longitudinal samples revealed temporal instability of microbiota |
| Jackson et al. (2016) [ | 1008 | British | 42–102 years | N/A | N/A | Robust associations between frailty and gut microbiota |
| Odamaki et al. (2016) [ | 367 | Japanese | 0–104 years | Proteobacteria/Bacteroidetes |
| |
| Cattaneo et al. (2017) [ | 83 | Italian | Mean ~ 70 yearsb | N/A | N/A | Gut microbial populations and peripheral inflammatory cytokines associated with cognitive impairment and brain amyloidosis |
CDAD clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea, aAge-effect compared to prior study of young adults; HE hospitalized elderly patients on antibotics, brange and overall mean for the full study not reported (reported by study group)
Fig. 3Simplified schematic outlining the potential relationships among health risk factors, gut dysbiosis, inflammation, and age-related disease—as well as potential interventions for attenuating gut-associated inflammation