表观遗传学
衰减
系统性红斑狼疮
干扰素
系统性狼疮
免疫学
生物
医学
内科学
物理
遗传学
疾病
光学
基因
作者
Rithwik Narendra,Hoang Van Phan,Sarah Patterson,Ana Laura Almonte Loya,Cristina Lanata,Christina Love,Joon‐Suk Park,Emily Lydon,Masayuki Shimoda,Lisa F. Barcellos,Honey Mekonen,Angela M. Detweiler,Padmini Deosthale,Norma Neff,Lindsey A. Criswell,Lenka Maliskova,Walter L. Eckalbar,Gabriela K. Fragiadakis,Jinoos Yazdany,Maria Dall’Era
出处
期刊:Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory - medRxiv
日期:2025-01-28
标识
DOI:10.1101/2025.01.27.25321143
摘要
Abstract In the general human population, aging is associated with a rise in systemic inflammation, primarily involving innate immune pathways related to interferon (IFN), toll-like receptor, and cytokine signaling. In systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), a prototypical systemic autoimmune disease, aging is distinctly associated with improvements in disease activity, suggesting a unique relationship between aging and inflammation in this disease. Using a multi-omic approach incorporating transcriptional profiling, single cell RNA sequencing, proteomics and methylation analysis, we studied age-related changes in the immune profiles of 287 SLE patients between 20 and 83 years old, and compared the results against 928 healthy controls aged between 21 and 89 years old. In contrast to the increase in inflammatory gene expression that occurs with aging in most healthy adults, SLE patients exhibited the opposite. Most notable was a decrease in type I IFN signaling that was evident across multiple cell types, with CD56-dim natural killer (NK) cells, CD4 + effector memory T cells, and naïve B cells exhibiting the most significant differences. We found that aging in SLE patients was also associated with decreased IFN-α2 and IFN-λ1 levels, and differential methylation of the genome. Notably, of the genes both downregulated and hypermethylated with older age, IFN-related genes were disproportionately represented, suggesting that age-related decreases in IFN signaling were driven in part by epigenetic silencing. Both SLE patients and healthy controls demonstrated age-related declines in naïve T cells and lymphoid progenitor cells, but only SLE patients demonstrated age-related increases in CD56-dim NK cells. Taken together, our work provides new insight into the phenomenon of inflammaging and the unique clinical improvement in disease activity that occurs in SLE patients as they age.