| Literature DB >> 29101015 |
Yinyin Li1, Jörg J Goronzy1, Cornelia M Weyand2.
Abstract
The aging process is the major driver of morbidity and mortality, steeply increasing the risk to succumb to cancer, cardiovascular disease, infection and neurodegeneration. Inflammation is a common denominator in age-related pathologies, identifying the immune system as a gatekeeper in aging overall. Among immune cells, T cells are long-lived and exposed to intense replication pressure, making them sensitive to aging-related abnormalities. In successful T cell aging, numbers of naïve cells, repertoire diversity and activation thresholds are preserved as long as possible; in maladaptive T cell aging, protective T cell functions decline and pro-inflammatory effector cells are enriched. Here, we review in the model system of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) how maladaptive T cell aging renders the host susceptible to chronic, tissue-damaging inflammation. In T cells from RA patients, known to be about 20years pre-aged, three interconnected functional domains are altered: DNA damage repair, metabolic activity generating energy and biosynthetic precursor molecules, and shaping of plasma membranes to promote T cell motility. In each of these domains, key molecules and pathways have now been identified, including the glycolytic enzymes PFKFB3 and G6PD; the DNA repair molecules ATM, DNA-PKcs and MRE11A; and the podosome marker protein TKS5. Some of these molecules may help in defining targetable pathways to slow the T cell aging process.Entities:
Keywords: ATM; DNA damage responses; DNA-PKcs; Inflammation; MRE11A; Rheumatoid arthritis; T cell aging; Telomere; mtDNA
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29101015 PMCID: PMC5871568 DOI: 10.1016/j.exger.2017.10.027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Gerontol ISSN: 0531-5565 Impact factor: 4.032