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Chronic mTOR inhibition in mice with rapamycin alters T , B , myeloid, and innate lymphoid cells and gut flora and prolongs life of immune‐deficient mice
Author(s) -
Hurez Vincent,
Dao Vinh,
Liu Aijie,
Pandeswara Srilakshmi,
Gelfond Jonathan,
Sun Lishi,
Bergman Molly,
Orihuela Carlos J.,
Galvan Veronica,
Padrón Álvaro,
Drerup Justin,
Liu Yang,
Hasty Paul,
Sharp Zelton Dave,
Curiel Tyler J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
aging cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.103
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1474-9726
pISSN - 1474-9718
DOI - 10.1111/acel.12380
Subject(s) - immune system , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , biology , mechanistic target of rapamycin , immunology , sirolimus , innate immune system , myeloid , acquired immune system , cancer research , signal transduction , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry
Summary The mammalian (mechanistic) target of rapamycin ( mTOR ) regulates critical immune processes that remain incompletely defined. Interest in mTOR inhibitor drugs is heightened by recent demonstrations that the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin extends lifespan and healthspan in mice. Rapamycin or related analogues (rapalogues) also mitigate age‐related debilities including increasing antigen‐specific immunity, improving vaccine responses in elderly humans, and treating cancers and autoimmunity, suggesting important new clinical applications. Nonetheless, immune toxicity concerns for long‐term mTOR inhibition, particularly immunosuppression, persist. Although mTOR is pivotal to fundamental, important immune pathways, little is reported on immune effects of mTOR inhibition in lifespan or healthspan extension, or with chronic mTOR inhibitor use. We comprehensively analyzed immune effects of rapamycin as used in lifespan extension studies. Gene expression profiling found many and novel changes in genes affecting differentiation, function, homeostasis, exhaustion, cell death, and inflammation in distinct T‐ and B‐lymphocyte and myeloid cell subpopulations. Immune functions relevant to aging and inflammation, and to cancer and infections, and innate lymphoid cell effects were validated in vitro and in vivo . Rapamycin markedly prolonged lifespan and healthspan in cancer‐ and infection‐prone mice supporting disease mitigation as a mechanism for mTOR suppression‐mediated longevity extension. It modestly altered gut metagenomes, and some metagenomic effects were linked to immune outcomes. Our data show novel mTOR inhibitor immune effects meriting further studies in relation to longevity and healthspan extension.

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