Contact PI: Homer L. Twigg III, M.D. – Indiana University School of Medicine
Many of the chronic diseases associated with aging as well as frailty are associated with evidence of chronic inflammation, which is usually due to persistent activation of the immune system. Because viruses are known to persist even after acute infection, these organisms could potentially lead to chronic inflammation. In this project we will be assessing whether viruses that inhabit the body in asymptomatic older people lead to chronic inflammation and whether this is associated with diseases of aging and markers of frailty.
Abstract: According to the US Census Bureau there were 47.8 million people older than 65 living in the U.S. in 2015 and is projected to more than double by 2050. The implications on health care costs are substantial. Identifying members of the aging population at increased risk for disease and frailty is a major public health imperative. Frailty and many of the chronic diseases of aging coincide with chronic inflammation. The cause of chronic inflammation is not known. One potential etiology is lifelong stimulation of the immune system by acute and chronic infections. Chronic antigenic stimulation can lead to a state of “immunosenescence”, which is associated with chronic secretion of inflammatory mediators. Persistent viruses, by virtue of their ability to establish latency, are ideally poised to drive chronic antigenic stimulation. In this project we hypothesize that older adults will exhibit higher viral burden that will lead to increased immune stimulation and chronic inflammation, and that this burden will be able to predict propensity for and timing of frailty and age- related diseases. To address this hypothesis we will measure viral burden in the blood and link it to inflammatory gene expression profiling and markers of T cell activation/senescence to validate these as “biomarkers” for prediction of chronic disease and frailty. This will be done through two large aging cohorts which are collecting blood along with extensive questionnaires and tests to assess the presence of chronic diseases and frailty. We propose the following specific aims: (1) To measure the blood virome (including bacteriophages) in an elderly population and younger controls. We will determine the presence of RNA and DNA viruses as well as bacteriophages in the blood compartment of younger and older adults using shotgun sequencing and RNA-Seq. The presence and activity of cytomegalovirus as a potential driver of immune aging will be assessed by monitoring anti-CMV immune responses. (2) To assess markers of chronic inflammation in an elderly population and younger controls and correlate these with evidence of immune aging and viral specific immune responses. We will determine the degree of systemic inflammation in the blood of subjects through measurement of cytokines and gene expression profiling of PBMCs. We will assess the degree of lymphocyte activation, senescence, and virus-specific activity by flow cytometry. (3) To correlate the blood virome, evidence of systemic inflammation and the presence of chronic disease and frailty in test subjects and create a potential inflammatory and viral “biomarker” for the detection of the complications of aging. Using data from specific aims 1 and 2, we will connect viral burden (including bacteriophages) and markers of chronic inflammation to each other and to clinical outcomes in a cross-sectional and mixed cross-sectional/longitudinal manner. This interdisciplinary project should not only deliver biomarkers for the complications of aging, but also suggest potential interventions that might mitigate the development of chronic disease and frailty in the aging population.