Tag: inflammaging

Cutting Calories to Slow Ageing – Without Compromising Health

Photo by Pixabay

Restricting calorie intake in species such as mice, rhesus monkeys, and fruit flies has been shown to extend their lifespans. In some cases, these animals not only live longer, but are also free of disease. But when pushed too far, calorie restriction can have negative impacts. Mice that undergo 40% reduction in calorie intake, for example, are more susceptible to infections, less likely to reproduce, and experience stunted growth.

Scientists have wondered whether there is a way to reap the longevity benefits of calorie restriction in humans without its negative repercussions. And in a new study, published April 13 in Nature Aging, they found a potential answer in an immune-related protein called complement component 3 (C3).

Yale researchers have previously shown that people who undergo moderate calorie restriction – a 14% reduction in calorie intake – for two years developed better immune defence without any growth or reproductive trade-offs.

“This concept demonstrates that ageing is actually malleable and a process that can be targeted,” says senior author Vishwa Deep Dixit, PhD, Waldemar Von Zedtwitz Professor of Pathology, professor of immunobiology and of comparative medicine, and director of the Yale Center for Research on Aging (Y-Age) at Yale School of Medicine.

Calorie restriction reduces inflammation-related protein

In the new studyDixit and his colleagues at YSM analysed the plasma samples of 42 individuals who took part in a National Institutes of Health-funded two-year trial called the Comprehensive Assessment of Long-Term Effects of Reducing Intake of Energy or CALERIE.

“It’s the only trial of its kind that has been done with such rigor and control and demonstrates relevance to human physiology,” Dixit says. During the trial, participants were able to reduce their calorie intake by 11 to 14% without feeling deprived.

In their analysis, the researchers detected more than 7000 proteins in the longitudinal plasma samples. Among them was an immune-related protein called complement component 3 (C3) that was significantly reduced following calorie restriction. C3 was of particular interest to the scientists as prior studies have suggested that activation of the complement system – a network of proteins involved in the defence against pathogens – could drive chronic inflammation, a major hallmark of ageing and age-associated diseases.

“But the causal effects of C3 in ageing and chronic inflammation have not been identified. So, we were very excited to find that in our study,” says Hee-Hoon Kim, PhD, a postdoctoral associate in the Dixit lab and a co-first author of the paper.

A target to slow ageing

When comparing the protein levels before and after two years of calorie restriction, the researchers identified white adipose tissue – the main type of fat tissue in mammals – as the primary site affected by calorie restriction.

The researchers confirmed their findings in animals. As with the human plasma, they found that C3 expression increased with age in mice. Further biochemical analyses showed that visceral white adipose tissue was responsible for an increase in C3 during ageing.

“We were not expecting that because these proteins are mainly synthesised in the liver,” says Manish Mishra, PhD, a postdoctoral associate in the Dixit lab and a co-first author of the study.

Single-cell RNA sequencing further revealed that the protein is produced by age-associated macrophages within the adipose tissues.

“This whole process was unknown in the beginning,” Mishra says. “Just to narrow it down to the subtypes of macrophages responsible for this complement protein production was very challenging.”

The body’s first line of immune defence, macrophages are mostly known for their role in engulfing pathogens. These immune cells also help maintain the balance of tissue functions, Dixit adds.

The question is whether the benefits gained from a reduction in C3 can be achieved without weight loss.

The researchers initially suspected that the shedding of adipose tissue or body fat due to weight loss may have stalled C3 production and slowed down the ageing process. After all, most of the study participants lost about 8.2kg after two years of moderate calorie restriction. However, when the researchers analysed the body mass index of the study participants, they did not observe any correlation between weight loss and a decrease in complement proteins.

“This suggests that calorie restriction has a beneficial effect that is unique to adipose tissues and is likely independent of weight loss,” Kim says.

Further, when the researchers inhibited C3 activation using a drug to mimic the effect of calorie restriction, the mice experienced less age-related inflammation.

The finding demonstrates that what is beneficial early on in life can be detrimental later on, Dixit says. This theory, known as antagonistic pleiotropy, was first proposed by biologist Peter Medawar in 1952 to describe the ageing process. A prime example of this theory is growth hormone production, which is essential in early development but could also drive cancer later in life.

Proteins like C3 are evolutionarily designed to protect us from infections, but as humans live much longer than their ancestors, these molecules can come back to harm us. Lowering the level of C3 proteins may be the key to enhancing health span, Dixit says.

The researchers are now investigating whether they could hold back C3 production to slow down ageing in humans using FDA-approved inhibitor drugs. “The idea is not to remove complement systems that are required for us to fight infections,” Dixit says. “Instead, the goal is to restore the balance.”

By Kristel Tjandra

Source: Yale University

Unlike Humans, Lemurs Do Not Experience ‘Inflammaging’

This lemur is called Nemesis and lives at the Duke Lemur Center

What can lemurs tell us about inflammation and aging, aka “inflammaging” in humans? That’s the question Elaine Guevara, a biological anthropologist who studies the evolution of life history and aging in primates, set out to understand.

In newly published research on age-related inflammation in ring-tailed and sifaka lemurs, Guevara discovered that perhaps we should rethink the inevitability of inflammaging in humans.

Although similar in many ways, ring-tailed and sifaka lemurs show differences in life pacing and lifespan, making useful comparisons. Because lemurs and humans are primates and share a common ancestor that lived millions of years ago, they offer valuable insights into human evolution.

Her findings, which are published in the Journal of Comparative Physiology B, were “surprising”, she said.

“Contrary to our predictions, neither species showed age-related change in either marker of oxidative stress. Neither lemur species exhibited age-related change in inflammation; if anything, contrary to our prediction, ring-tailed lemurs showed marginal declines in inflammation with age,” Guevara said.

This finding, consistent with a few recent studies of other non-human primates, suggests that lemurs avoid the phenomenon of “inflammaging” widely observed in humans.

The study shows inflammaging is not a universal feature of primates, pointing to some differences that might suggest it turns out it’s not even a universal feature of humans, according to Christine Drea, a professor of evolutionary anthropology who was one of the researchers working with Guevara.

What is Inflammaging?

As we grow older, low-grade chronic inflammation sets in, which in turn can cause health problems such as heart disease, strokes, diabetes, cancer and osteoarthritis.

Why inflammaging increases with age in humans, what causes it and how it can be prevented are answers to questions that can unlock critical information to help humans live longer and healthier lives.

Collecting Data from Lemurs

Drea said the team first had to find a way to measure oxidative stress, which can be found in blood, urine and saliva. They settled on urine.

“Our role at the beginning was planning, designing, brainstorming, comparing and getting these samples,” said Drea, who has worked with the Duke Lemur Center since 1999. The Lemur Center does not allow research that will harm the animals.

The next step says Guevara is to conduct similar research with lemurs in the wild.

“There are a lot of good reasons to think that aging can be quite different in captivity and in the wild, and that in itself, is informative to evaluating the degree to which human inflammation is intrinsic versus environmental,” she said.

In the meantime, Guevara says this study serves as the first step in unravelling the question of why humans are suffering from inflammatory-related and age-related conditions and finding ways to treat them.

With a rapidly aging global population, “these insights are essential for mitigating disability and improving quality of life in later years,” she said.

Source: Duke University