Cross‐species comparison illuminates the importance of iron homeostasis for splenic anti‐immunosenescence

Author:

He Ziqing123,He Weiya123,Hu Chuanxia1,Liao Jiayu1,Deng Wenjun1,Sun Haijian123,Huang Qingpei1,Chen Weilue1,Zhang Libiao4,Liu Meiling1,Dong Ji13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. GMU‐GIBH Joint School of Life Sciences, The Guangdong‐Hong Kong‐Macau Joint Laboratory for Cell Fate Regulation and Diseases, Guangzhou National Laboratory Guangzhou Medical University Guangzhou China

2. Faculty of Health Sciences University of Macau Macau China

3. Bioland Laboratory (Guangzhou Regenerative Medicine and Health Guangdong Laboratory) Guangzhou China

4. Guangdong Key Laboratory of Animal Conservation and Resource Utilization, Guangdong Public Laboratory of Wild Animal Conservation and Utilization Institute of Zoology, Guangdong Academy of Sciences Guangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractAlthough immunosenescence may result in increased morbidity and mortality, many mammals have evolved effective immune coping strategies to extend their lifespans. Thus, the immune systems of long‐lived mammals present unique models to study healthy longevity. To identify the molecular clues of anti‐immunosenescence, we first built high‐quality reference genome for a long‐lived myotis bat, and then compared three long‐lived mammals (i.e., bat, naked mole rat, and human) versus the short‐lived mammal, mouse, in splenic immune cells at single‐cell resolution. A close relationship between B:T cell ratio and immunosenescence was detected, as B:T cell ratio was much higher in mouse than long‐lived mammals and significantly increased during aging. Importantly, we identified several iron‐related genes that could resist immunosenescence changes, especially the iron chaperon, PCBP1, which was upregulated in long‐lived mammals but dramatically downregulated during aging in all splenic immune cell types. Supportively, immune cells of mouse spleens contained more free iron than those of bat spleens, suggesting higher level of ROS‐induced damage in mouse. PCBP1 downregulation during aging was also detected in hepatic but not pulmonary immune cells, which is consistent with the crucial roles of spleen and liver in organismal iron recycling. Furthermore, PCBP1 perturbation in immune cell lines would result in cellular iron dyshomeostasis and senescence. Finally, we identified two transcription factors that could regulate PCBP1 during aging. Together, our findings highlight the importance of iron homeostasis in splenic anti‐immunosenescence, and provide unique insight for improving human healthspan.

Funder

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Aging

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