| Literature DB >> 32582361 |
Leonard Daniël Samson1,2, A Mieke H Boots2, José A Ferreira1, H Susan J Picavet1, Lia G H de Rond1, Mary-Lène de Zeeuw-Brouwer1, W M Monique Verschuren1,3, Anne-Marie Buisman1, Peter Engelfriet1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With advancing age, the composition of leukocyte subpopulations in peripheral blood is known to change, but how this change differs between men and women and how it relates to frailty is poorly understood. Our aim in this exploratory study was to investigate whether frailty is associated with changes in immune cell subpopulations and whether this differs between men and women. Therefore, we performed in-depth immune cellular profiling by enumerating a total of 37 subpopulations of T cells, B cells, NK cells, monocytes, and neutrophils in peripheral blood of 289 elderly people between 60-87 years of age. Associations between frailty and each immune cell subpopulation were tested separately in men and women and were adjusted for age and CMV serostatus. In addition, a random forest algorithm was used to predict a participant's frailty score based on enumeration of immune cell subpopulations.Entities:
Keywords: Frailty; Healthy aging; Immune cellular profiling; Immune homeostasis; Immunosenescence; Sex-specific immune profile
Year: 2020 PMID: 32582361 PMCID: PMC7310472 DOI: 10.1186/s12979-020-00191-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immun Ageing ISSN: 1742-4933 Impact factor: 6.400
Fig. 1Subpopulations of a T cells, b B cells, c NK cells, d Monocytes, and e Neutrophils, of which absolute cell numbers were determined. CM: central memory (CD4 or CD8 positive) T cells. Tem: effector memory (CD4 or CD8 positive) T cells. TemRA: effector memory T cells re-expressing CD45RA. See Table S1 for definition of all phenotypes. 1Additionally analyzed on expression of CD38 and HLA-DR. 2Additionally analyzed on expression of CD16
Fig. 2The numbers of cells per leukocyte subpopulations in men (n=145) and women (n=144) above 60 years of age. The boxplots show median values with interquartile range. CM: central memory (CD4 or CD8 positive) T cells. Tem: effector memory (CD4 or CD8 positive) T cells. TemRA: effector memory T cells re-expressing CD45RA. *: Outcomes of tests of the association between leukocyte numbers and sex (adjusted for age and CMV serostatus) which passed the Benjamini-Hochberg method at a false discovery rate of 15%
Fig. 3The numbers of CD4 and CD8 Tem and TemRA cells in men (n=145) and women (n=144) above 60 years of age. The boxplots show median values with interquartile range. CM: central memory (CD4 or CD8 positive) T cells. Tem: effector memory (CD4 or CD8 positive) T cells. TemRA: effector memory T cells re-expressing CD45RA. *: Outcomes of tests of the association between leukocyte numbers and sex (adjusted for age and CMV serostatus) which passed the Benjamini-Hochberg method at a false discovery rate of 15%
Fig. 4Variable importance plot showing the leukocyte subpopulations and other variables that are most helpful in predicting frailty in men (n=140) and women (n=137). Participants with missing frailty index score data (n=12) were excluded from analysis. The bold lines and dots represent the most important variables that show an increase in mean squared error (MSE) of >50%. See text for the meaning of variable importance
Fig. 5Partial dependence plots illustrating the role of the most important leukocyte phenotypes in predicting frailty in a random forest predictor for men (n=140) and women (n=137). Participants with missing frailty index score data (n=12) were excluded from analysis. The short vertical segments on the horizontal axis represent the deciles of the cell numbers in the data. Range of the figures is restricted to the part containing most of the data