Old plasma dilution reduces human biological age: a clinical study

Geroscience. 2022 Dec;44(6):2701-2720. doi: 10.1007/s11357-022-00645-w. Epub 2022 Aug 24.

Abstract

This work extrapolates to humans the previous animal studies on blood heterochronicity and establishes a novel direct measurement of biological age. Our results support the hypothesis that, similar to mice, human aging is driven by age-imposed systemic molecular excess, the attenuation of which reverses biological age, defined in our work as a deregulation (noise) of 10 novel protein biomarkers. The results on biological age are strongly supported by the data, which demonstrates that rounds of therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) promote a global shift to a younger systemic proteome, including youthfully restored pro-regenerative, anticancer, and apoptotic regulators and a youthful profile of myeloid/lymphoid markers in circulating cells, which have reduced cellular senescence and lower DNA damage. Mechanistically, the circulatory regulators of the JAK-STAT, MAPK, TGF-beta, NF-κB, and Toll-like receptor signaling pathways become more youthfully balanced through normalization of TLR4, which we define as a nodal point of this molecular rejuvenation. The significance of our findings is confirmed through big-data gene expression studies.

Keywords: Aging; Biological noise; Lymphoid/myeloid markers; Plasmapheresis; Proteomics; Rejuvenation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Aging
  • Animals
  • Cellular Senescence
  • Humans
  • Mice
  • NF-kappa B* / metabolism
  • Signal Transduction*
  • Transforming Growth Factor beta

Substances

  • NF-kappa B
  • Transforming Growth Factor beta