Spermidine mitigates immune cell senescence, enhances autophagy, and boosts vaccine responses in healthy older adults

Autor/innen

  • Ghada Alsaleh
  • Mohammad Ali
  • Amir Kayvanjoo
  • Feng Liu
  • Sagida Bibi
  • Lin Luo
  • Melissa Govender
  • Miles Carroll
  • Sebastian Hofer
  • Tobias Eisenberg
  • Christoph Magnes
  • Loren Kell
  • Christopher Chung
  • Yu Deng
  • Aneesha Bhandari
  • Liye Chen
  • Barbara Kronsteiner-Dobramysl
  • Susie Dunachie
  • Owen Spiller
  • Teresa Lambe
  • Paul Klenerman
  • Lucy Jones
  • Anna Katharina Simon

Journal

  • Research Square

Quellenangabe

  • Research Square

Zusammenfassung

  • Older adults are particularly vulnerable to infectious diseases, and vaccines are often less effective in this population due to immunosenescence, which is characterized by diminished B and T memory responses. Autophagy is believed to underlie many facets of cellular aging, including immunosenescence. It is crucial for maintaining memory T and B cell functions but declines with age, along with the endogenous metabolite spermidine that helps maintain autophagy levels. We conducted a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study in 40 volunteers over 65, administering oral spermidine after their third SARS-CoV-2 vaccine dose. Spermidine reduced immune cell senescence, evidenced by decreased p16 expression in lymphocytes. Following spermidine treatment, autophagic ux, TFEB targets, and autophagy-related genes detected by scRNA-seq were highly enriched in B cells. Spermidine signi cantly increased spike-speci c IgG secretion and memory B cells, and neutralizing antibody activity against SARS-CoV-2 strains, in vaccine non-responders that also presented with high immune cell senescence. Targeting immune senescence using spermidine may offer a practical approach to improve immune responses in vaccine non-responders, as a post- or pre-vaccination intervention. Additionally, it highlights the utility of immune senescence markers as predictive biomarkers for identifying vaccine non-responders, addressing a key challenge in vaccine development for an aging population.


DOI

doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-5686388/v1