| Literature DB >> 32534944 |
Huda M Omran1, Mohamed S Almaliki2.
Abstract
The aging-associated decline of biological functions represents an important contributor to the increase in morbidity and mortality of human beings. Of these biological functions deterioration; there is a significant decline in the heart function, impairments in the lungs gas exchange, and impairments in the immune function. Many alterations in the body humeral and cellular immune response were observed with ageing process: The circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines are increased, the naive lymphocytes are decreased, the numbers of the antigen-presenting cells areelevated and the overall response is impaired. In addition, ageing is associated with a progressive restriction in the telomere length. Telomeres are located at chromosomes ends and play an essential role in preserving chromosome stability. Also, telomere length is very important to the immune system, because of the high sensitivity of the immune cells to the shortening of telomeres. Telomeres shortening adversely affect the immune cells' function and developments. These adverse changes increased the susceptibility for severe infection, risk of hospitalization, and even death. Elderly COVID-19 patients are at a real risk of complications due to impaired immune function, cytokine storm and defective respiratory function. Administration of anti-ageing immunomodulation factors like Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide NAD+ can minimize these changes through its potent immunomodulation and longevity effects. NAD+ has a direct inhibitory effect on PARP-1 and can prevent pro-inflammatory cytokines over-activation. Increasing the NAD+ level will also result in stabilizing telomeres and this has a positive impact on immune cells function.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; COVID-19; Cytokine storm; NAD+; Telomeres
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32534944 PMCID: PMC7275989 DOI: 10.1016/j.jiph.2020.06.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Public Health ISSN: 1876-0341 Impact factor: 3.718
Fig. 1COVID-19 caused by SARS-CoV-2 virus, leads to activation of innate immune cells, especially in patients developing severe disease and ARDS. levels of many pro-inflammatory effector cytokines, such as TNF, IL-1β, IL-6, and IL-8, as well as chemokines, such as MCP1, and IP10, are elevated, reflecting innate immune activation in patients with COVID-19, with higher levels in those who are critically ill.
Fig. 2Death rate by age for COVID 19 recorded cases.
Source: Worldmeter, 30 March 2020.
Fig. 3Ageing is associated with the accumulation of DNA damage, which leads to genotoxic stress, activation of PARP and decrease NAD with subsequent decline in SIRT1 activity in the nucleus and mitochondria, respectively. Decreased SIRT1 leads to NF-κB activation and decreased FOXO3a activity, together with increase p53 activity and ROS that lead to increased inflammation and decrease mitochondrial function.
Association of telomere length with age, gender, race, health risk factors, age-related chronic disease, and infection.
| First author, year (reference no.) | Study design | Factor | Telomere length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cawthan, 2003 [ | Cross- sectional | Heart diseases | Decrease |
| Benetos, 2004 [ | Cross- sectional | Atherosclerosis in Hypertensive | Decrease |
| Gardner, 2005 [ | Cohort | Diabetes mellitus | Decrease |
| Demissie, 2006 [ | Cohort | Hypertension, increased insulin resistance and oxidative stress | Decrease |
| Fitzpatrick, 2007 [ | Cross- sectional | Heart diseases | Decrease |
| Nordfjäll, 2008 [ | Cohort | Obesity | Decrease |
| Halaschek-Wiener, 2008 [ | Case-control | Caucasian race | Decrease |
| Sanders, 2013 [ | Review | Ageing, male gender, Caucasian race, and atherosclerosis’ | Decrease |
| Fujishiro, 2018 [ | Cohort | Caucasian race | Slow decline |
| Harpaz, 2018 [ | Cross- sectional | Alcohol | Decrease |