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      Detection of a Novel, Integrative Aging Process Suggests Complex Physiological Integration

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          Abstract

          Many studies of aging examine biomarkers one at a time, but complex systems theory and network theory suggest that interpretations of individual markers may be context-dependent. Here, we attempted to detect underlying processes governing the levels of many biomarkers simultaneously by applying principal components analysis to 43 common clinical biomarkers measured longitudinally in 3694 humans from three longitudinal cohort studies on two continents (Women’s Health and Aging I & II, InCHIANTI, and the Baltimore Longitudinal Study on Aging). The first axis was associated with anemia, inflammation, and low levels of calcium and albumin. The axis structure was precisely reproduced in all three populations and in all demographic sub-populations (by sex, race, etc.); we call the process represented by the axis “integrated albunemia.” Integrated albunemia increases and accelerates with age in all populations, and predicts mortality and frailty – but not chronic disease – even after controlling for age. This suggests a role in the aging process, though causality is not yet clear. Integrated albunemia behaves more stably across populations than its component biomarkers, and thus appears to represent a higher-order physiological process emerging from the structure of underlying regulatory networks. If this is correct, detection of this process has substantial implications for physiological organization more generally.

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          Inflamm-aging. An evolutionary perspective on immunosenescence.

          In this paper we extend the "network theory of aging," and we argue that a global reduction in the capacity to cope with a variety of stressors and a concomitant progressive increase in proinflammatory status are major characteristics of the aging process. This phenomenon, which we will refer to as "inflamm-aging," is provoked by a continuous antigenic load and stress. On the basis of evolutionary studies, we also argue that the immune and the stress responses are equivalent and that antigens are nothing other than particular types of stressors. We also propose to return macrophage to its rightful place as central actor not only in the inflammatory response and immunity, but also in the stress response. The rate of reaching the threshold of proinflammatory status over which diseases/disabilities ensue and the individual capacity to cope with and adapt to stressors are assumed to be complex traits with a genetic component. Finally, we argue that the persistence of inflammatory stimuli over time represents the biologic background (first hit) favoring the susceptibility to age-related diseases/disabilities. A second hit (absence of robust gene variants and/or presence of frail gene variants) is likely necessary to develop overt organ-specific age-related diseases having an inflammatory pathogenesis, such as atherosclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, osteoporosis, and diabetes. Following this perspective, several paradoxes of healthy centenarians (increase of plasma levels of inflammatory cytokines, acute phase proteins, and coagulation factors) are illustrated and explained. In conclusion, the beneficial effects of inflammation devoted to the neutralization of dangerous/harmful agents early in life and in adulthood become detrimental late in life in a period largely not foreseen by evolution, according to the antagonistic pleiotropy theory of aging.
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            Meta-analysis of age-related gene expression profiles identifies common signatures of aging.

            Numerous microarray studies of aging have been conducted, yet given the noisy nature of gene expression changes with age, elucidating the transcriptional features of aging and how these relate to physiological, biochemical and pathological changes remains a critical problem. We performed a meta-analysis of age-related gene expression profiles using 27 datasets from mice, rats and humans. Our results reveal several common signatures of aging, including 56 genes consistently overexpressed with age, the most significant of which was APOD, and 17 genes underexpressed with age. We characterized the biological processes associated with these signatures and found that age-related gene expression changes most notably involve an overexpression of inflammation and immune response genes and of genes associated with the lysosome. An underexpression of collagen genes and of genes associated with energy metabolism, particularly mitochondrial genes, as well as alterations in the expression of genes related to apoptosis, cell cycle and cellular senescence biomarkers, were also observed. By employing a new method that emphasizes sensitivity, our work further reveals previously unknown transcriptional changes with age in many genes, processes and functions. We suggest these molecular signatures reflect a combination of degenerative processes but also transcriptional responses to the process of aging. Overall, our results help to understand how transcriptional changes relate to the process of aging and could serve as targets for future studies. http://genomics.senescence.info/uarrays/signatures.html. Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
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              Hepcidin, a putative mediator of anemia of inflammation, is a type II acute-phase protein.

              Hepcidin is a liver-made peptide proposed to be a central regulator of intestinal iron absorption and iron recycling by macrophages. In animal models, hepcidin is induced by inflammation and iron loading, but its regulation in humans has not been studied. We report that urinary excretion of hepcidin was greatly increased in patients with iron overload, infections, or inflammatory diseases. Hepcidin excretion correlated well with serum ferritin levels, which are regulated by similar pathologic stimuli. In vitro iron loading of primary human hepatocytes, however, unexpectedly down-regulated hepcidin mRNA, suggesting that in vivo regulation of hepcidin expression by iron stores involves complex indirect effects. Hepcidin mRNA was dramatically induced by interleukin-6 (IL-6) in vitro, but not by IL-1 or tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), demonstrating that human hepcidin is a type II acute-phase reactant. The linkage of hepcidin induction to inflammation in humans supports its proposed role as a key mediator of anemia of inflammation.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                PLoS One
                PLoS ONE
                plos
                plosone
                PLoS ONE
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, CA USA )
                1932-6203
                11 March 2015
                2015
                : 10
                : 3
                : e0116489
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Groupe de recherche PRIMUS, Department of Family Medicine, University of Sherbrooke, 3001 12e Ave N, Sherbrooke, QC, J1H 5N4, Canada
                [2 ]Department of Chemistry, Biochemistry and Physics, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, 3351, boul. des Forges, C.P. 500, Trois-Rivières, QC, G9A 5H7, Canada
                [3 ]Department of Biology, University of Sherbrooke, 2500 boulevard de l'Université, Sherbrooke, QC, J1K 2R1, Canada
                [4 ]Department of Mathematics, University of Sherbrooke, 2500 boulevard de l'Université, Sherbrooke, QC, J1K 2R1, Canada
                [5 ]Department of Geriatrics, University of Sherbrooke, 3001 12e Ave N, Sherbrooke, QC, J1H 5N4, Canada
                [6 ]Economics Department, ESG, Université du Québec à Montréal, 315 rue Sainte-Catherine Est, Montréal, QC, H2X 3X2, Canada
                [7 ]Translational Gerontology Branch, Longitudinal Studies Section, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, MedStar Harbor Hospital, 3001 S. Hanover Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21225, United States of America
                [8 ]Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 W. 168th Street, R1408, New York, New York 10032, United States of America
                University of Wisconsin, UNITED STATES
                Author notes

                Competing Interests: No authors have any specific competing interests other than a general professional competing interest of being required to publish research articles for career advancement and obtaining funding.

                Conceived and designed the experiments: AAC EM QL PB RP FDB ML VL LF. Analyzed the data: AAC RP FDB ML VL. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: EJM LPF LF. Wrote the paper: AAC EM QL PB RP FDB TF ML VL EJM LPF LF. Provided biological interpretation of statistical results: AAC EM PB TF EJM LPF LF.

                Article
                PONE-D-14-38613
                10.1371/journal.pone.0116489
                4356614
                25761112
                5f2b6036-3f8c-4e68-83c5-d39c19babda1

                This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication

                History
                : 27 August 2014
                : 10 December 2014
                Page count
                Figures: 11, Tables: 3, Pages: 26
                Funding
                AAC is a member of the Fonds de recherche du Quebec - Sante (FRQ-S)-supported Centre de recherche sur le vieillissement and Centre de recherche du CHUS, and is a funded Research Scholar of the FRQ-S. This research was supported by Canadian Institutes of Health Research grant #s 110789, 120305, 119485 and by National Science and Engineering Research Council Discovery Grant # 402079-2011 (all for AAC and TF), as well as by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Aging (EJM and LF). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
                Categories
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                Data used in these analyses cannot be freely shared due to confidentiality constraints related to human medical data. Interested researchers may request data by submitting a research proposal to WHAS at https://jhpeppercenter.jhmi.edu/ec_proposal/login.aspx, InCHIANTI at http://inchiantistudy.net/wp/, and BLSA at http://www.blsa.nih.gov/researchers.

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