Age-Associated Decrease in TLR Function in Primary Human Dendritic Cells Predicts Influenza Vaccine Response

Alexander Panda(Office of Infectious Diseases), Feng Qian(Center for Rheumatology), Subhasis Mohanty(Office of Infectious Diseases), David van Duin(Office of Infectious Diseases), Frances K. Newman(Saint Louis University), Lin Zhang(Center for Rheumatology), Shu Chen, Virginia Towle, Robert B. Belshe(Saint Louis University), Erol Fikrig(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Heather Allore, Ruth R. Montgomery(Center for Rheumatology), Albert C. Shaw(Office of Infectious Diseases)
The Journal of Immunology
January 25, 2010
Cited by 549Open Access
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Abstract

We evaluated TLR function in primary human dendritic cells (DCs) from 104 young (age 21-30 y) and older (> or =65 y) individuals. We used multicolor flow cytometry and intracellular cytokine staining of myeloid DCs (mDCs) and plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs) and found substantial decreases in older compared with young individuals in TNF-alpha, IL-6, and/or IL-12 (p40) production in mDCs and in TNF-alpha and IFN-alpha production in pDCs in response to TLR1/2, TLR2/6, TLR3, TLR5, and TLR8 engagement in mDCs and TLR7 and TLR9 in pDCs. These differences were highly significant after adjustment for heterogeneity between young and older groups (e.g., gender, race, body mass index, number of comorbid medical conditions) using mixed-effect statistical modeling. Studies of surface and intracellular expression of TLR proteins and of TLR gene expression in purified mDCs and pDCs revealed potential contributions for both transcriptional and posttranscriptional mechanisms in these age-associated effects. Moreover, intracellular cytokine production in the absence of TLR ligand stimulation was elevated in cells from older compared with young individuals, suggesting a dysregulation of cytokine production that may limit further activation by TLR engagement. Our results provide evidence for immunosenescence in DCs; notably, defects in cytokine production were strongly associated with poor Ab response to influenza immunization, a functional consequence of impaired TLR function in the aging innate immune response.


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