Department of Internal Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States.
Department of Kinesiology and Applied Physiology, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware, United States.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2024 May 1;326(5):R416-R426. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00267.2023. Epub 2024 Feb 26.
Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) decreases with advancing age, contributing to increased risk of cognitive impairment; however, the mechanisms underlying the age-related decrease in CVR are incompletely understood. Age-related changes to T cells, such as impaired mitochondrial respiration, increased inflammation, likely contribute to peripheral and cerebrovascular dysfunction in animals. However, whether T-cell mitochondrial respiration is related to cerebrovascular function in humans is not known. Therefore, we hypothesized that peripheral T-cell mitochondrial respiration would be positively associated with CVR and that T-cell glycolytic metabolism would be negatively associated with CVR. Twenty middle-aged adults (58 ± 5 yr) were recruited for this study. T cells were separated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Cellular oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and extracellular acidification rate (ECAR, a marker of glycolytic activity) were measured using extracellular flux analysis. CVR was quantified using the breath-hold index (BHI), which reflects the change in blood velocity in the middle-cerebral artery (MCAv) during a 30-s breath-hold. In contrast to our hypothesis, we found that basal OCR in CD8 T cells (β = -0.59, = 0.27, = 0.019) was negatively associated with BHI. However, in accordance with our hypothesis, we found that basal ECAR (β = -2.20, = 0.29, = 0.015) and maximum ECAR (β = -50, = 0.24, = 0.029) were negatively associated with BHI in CD8 T cells. There were no associations observed in CD4 T cells. These associations appeared to be primarily mediated by an association with the pressor response to the breath-hold test. Overall, our findings suggest that CD8 T-cell respiration and glycolytic activity may influence CVR in humans. Peripheral T-cell metabolism is related to in vivo cerebrovascular reactivity in humans. Higher glycolytic metabolism in CD8 T cells was associated with lower cerebrovascular reactivity to a breath-hold in middle-aged adults, which is possibly reflective of a more proinflammatory state in midlife.
脑血管反应性(CVR)随年龄增长而降低,增加了认知障碍的风险;然而,CVR 随年龄增长而降低的机制尚不完全清楚。T 细胞的年龄相关变化,如线粒体呼吸受损、炎症增加,可能导致动物的外周和脑血管功能障碍。然而,T 细胞线粒体呼吸是否与人类的脑血管功能有关尚不清楚。因此,我们假设外周 T 细胞线粒体呼吸与 CVR 呈正相关,T 细胞糖酵解代谢与 CVR 呈负相关。本研究招募了 20 名中年成年人(58±5 岁)。从外周血单核细胞中分离 T 细胞。使用细胞外通量分析测量细胞耗氧率(OCR)和细胞外酸化率(ECAR,糖酵解活性的标志物)。通过呼吸暂停指数(BHI)量化 CVR,BHI 反映了在 30 秒呼吸暂停期间大脑中动脉(MCAv)血流速度的变化。与我们的假设相反,我们发现 CD8 T 细胞的基础 OCR(β=-0.59, =0.27, =0.019)与 BHI 呈负相关。然而,与我们的假设一致,我们发现 CD8 T 细胞的基础 ECAR(β=-2.20, =0.29, =0.015)和最大 ECAR(β=-50, =0.24, =0.029)与 BHI 呈负相关。在 CD4 T 细胞中未观察到相关性。这些关联似乎主要是通过与呼吸暂停试验的升压反应相关联来介导的。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,CD8 T 细胞的呼吸和糖酵解活性可能会影响人类的 CVR。外周 T 细胞代谢与人类的脑血管反应性有关。CD8 T 细胞中更高的糖酵解代谢与中年人的呼吸暂停时的脑血管反应性降低有关,这可能反映了中年更具炎症状态。