Rejuvenation of the aged brain immune cell landscape in mice through p16-positive senescent cell clearance

Author:

Zhang XuORCID,Pearsall Vesselina M.,Carver Chase M.,Atkinson Elizabeth J.,Clarkson Benjamin D. S.ORCID,Grund Ethan M.,Baez-Faria Michelle,Pavelko Kevin D.ORCID,Kachergus Jennifer M.,White Thomas A.ORCID,Johnson Renee K.,Malo Courtney S.,Gonzalez-Suarez Alan M.ORCID,Ayasoufi KatayounORCID,Johnson Kurt O.,Tritz Zachariah P.,Fain Cori E.ORCID,Khadka Roman H.,Ogrodnik MikolajORCID,Jurk DianaORCID,Zhu YiORCID,Tchkonia TamaraORCID,Revzin Alexander,Kirkland James L.ORCID,Johnson Aaron J.,Howe Charles L.ORCID,Thompson E. AubreyORCID,LeBrasseur Nathan K.ORCID,Schafer Marissa J.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractCellular senescence is a plausible mediator of inflammation-related tissue dysfunction. In the aged brain, senescent cell identities and the mechanisms by which they exert adverse influence are unclear. Here we used high-dimensional molecular profiling, coupled with mechanistic experiments, to study the properties of senescent cells in the aged mouse brain. We show that senescence and inflammatory expression profiles increase with age and are brain region- and sex-specific. p16-positive myeloid cells exhibiting senescent and disease-associated activation signatures, including upregulation of chemoattractant factors, accumulate in the aged mouse brain. Senescent brain myeloid cells promote peripheral immune cell chemotaxis in vitro. Activated resident and infiltrating immune cells increase in the aged brain and are partially restored to youthful levels through p16-positive senescent cell clearance in female p16-InkAttac mice, which is associated with preservation of cognitive function. Our study reveals dynamic remodeling of the brain immune cell landscape in aging and suggests senescent cell targeting as a strategy to counter inflammatory changes and cognitive decline.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute on Aging

David F. and Margaret T. Grohne Family Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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