John Van Geest Centre for Brain Repair, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge, Forvie Site, Cambridge, CB2 0PY, UK.
Neurology Unit, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
J Neuroinflammation. 2018 May 28;15(1):166. doi: 10.1186/s12974-018-1206-5.
A wealth of evidence implicates both central and peripheral immune changes as contributing to the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). It is critical to better understand this aspect of PD given that it is a tractable target for disease-modifying therapy. Age-related changes are known to occur in the immune system (immunosenescence) and might be of particular relevance in PD given that its prevalence rises with increasing age. We therefore sought to investigate this with respect to T cell replicative senescence, a key immune component of human ageing.
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were extracted from blood samples from 41 patients with mild PD (Hoehn and Yahr stages 1-2, mean (SD) disease duration 4.3 (1.2) years) and 41 age- and gender-matched controls. Immunophenotyping was performed with flow cytometry using markers of T lymphocyte activation and senescence (CD3, CD4, CD8, HLA-DR, CD38, CD28, CCR7, CD45RA, CD57, CD31). Cytomegalovirus (CMV) serology was measured given its proposed relevance in driving T cell senescence.
Markers of replicative senescence in the CD8+ population were strikingly reduced in PD cases versus controls (reduced CD57 expression (p = 0.005), reduced percentage of 'late differentiated' CD57CD28 cells (p = 0.007) and 'TEMRA' cells (p = 0.042)), whilst expression of activation markers (CD28) was increased (p = 0.005). This was not driven by differences in CMV seropositivity. No significant changes were observed in the CD4 population.
This study demonstrates for the first time that the peripheral immune profile in PD is distinctly atypical for an older population, with a lack of the CD8+ T cell replicative senescence which characterises normal ageing. This suggests that 'abnormal' immune ageing may contribute to the development of PD, and markers of T cell senescence warrant further investigation as potential biomarkers in this condition.
大量证据表明,中枢和外周免疫变化是导致帕金森病(PD)发病机制的原因。鉴于其是一种可改变疾病治疗的靶点,更好地了解 PD 的这一方面至关重要。众所周知,免疫系统会发生与年龄相关的变化(免疫衰老),并且在 PD 中可能特别相关,因为其患病率随着年龄的增长而增加。因此,我们试图研究与 T 细胞复制衰老有关的问题,这是人类衰老的一个关键免疫组成部分。
从 41 名轻度 PD 患者(Hoehn 和 Yahr 分期 1-2 期,平均(SD)病程 4.3(1.2)年)和 41 名年龄和性别匹配的对照者的血液样本中提取外周血单核细胞。使用流式细胞术对 T 淋巴细胞活化和衰老的标志物(CD3、CD4、CD8、HLA-DR、CD38、CD28、CCR7、CD45RA、CD57、CD31)进行免疫表型分析。鉴于巨细胞病毒(CMV)血清学在驱动 T 细胞衰老方面的潜在相关性,对其进行了测量。
与对照组相比,PD 病例中 CD8+群体的复制衰老标志物明显减少(CD57 表达减少(p=0.005),“晚期分化”CD57CD28 细胞(p=0.007)和“TEMRA”细胞(p=0.042)的比例减少),而激活标志物(CD28)的表达增加(p=0.005)。这不是由 CMV 血清阳性率差异引起的。在 CD4 群体中没有观察到显著变化。
这项研究首次表明,PD 患者的外周免疫谱与老年人群明显不同,缺乏正常衰老时特征性的 CD8+T 细胞复制衰老。这表明“异常”免疫衰老可能导致 PD 的发生,T 细胞衰老标志物值得进一步研究作为该疾病的潜在生物标志物。