Spermidine mitigates immune cell senescence and boosts vaccine responses in healthy older adults -- a pilot study
Autor/innen
- Ghada Alsaleh
- Mohammad Ali
- Amir Hossein Kayvanjoo
- Feng Liu
- Tanaïs Moreau
- Sagida Bibi
- Lin Luo
- Melissa Govender
- Miles Carroll
- Sebastian J. Hofer
- Eisenberg Tobias
- Christoph Magnes
- Loren Kell
- Christopher Chung
- Yu Deng
- Aneesha Bhandari
- Lucy Garner
- Thomas Conrad
- Liye Chen
- Barbara Kronsteiner-Dobramysl
- Susie Dunachie
- Owen B. Spiller
- Teresa Lambe
- Paul Klenerman
- Lucy C. Jones
- A. Katharina Simon
Journal
- Aging Cell
Quellenangabe
- Aging Cell 25 (6): e70545
Zusammenfassung
Older adults are highly vulnerable to infectious diseases, and vaccines are often less effective in this population because of diminished B and T cell memory responses driven by impaired autophagy, immunosenescence, and chronic low-grade inflammation. Spermidine has been shown to counteract immunosenescence and induce autophagy in preclinical models, and its levels decline with age in humans. We conducted a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled pilot study in 40 adults over 65 years of age following their third SARS-CoV-2 vaccine dose to assess the safety of Spermidine and its effects on vaccine-induced immunity. Daily oral supplementation (6 mg, 13 weeks) was well-tolerated. Vaccine non-responsiveness was common, and non-responders exhibited a distinct immune-senescence signature marked by elevated p16, mTOR signalling, and γ-H2AX+ DNA damage in lymphocytes. Spermidine reversed these features and significantly enhanced spike-specific IgG secretion, memory B cell recall responses and neutralising antibody activity, specifically in non-responders. Single-cell RNA-seq after treatment revealed increased expression of TFEB targets and autophagy-related genes in B cells, in line with elevated autophagic flux. These findings suggest that targeting immune cell senescence with Spermidine may improve vaccine responsiveness in older adults and highlight immune-senescence markers as potential predictors of vaccine failure in ageing populations.