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A simple cell proliferation assay and the inflammatory protein content show significant differences in human plasmas from young and old subjects
Anita Muraglia, Olga Utyro, Marta Nardini, Marc Santolini, Davide Ceresa, Vanessa Agostini, Alessio Nencioni, Gilberto Filaci, Ranieri Cancedda, Maddalena Mastrogiacomo
Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology · 2024 · ▲ 2 citations
Cellular senescence
Chronic inflammation
Plasma dilution / young plasma
Cell culture / in vitro
Human
Mouse
Abstract
Some studies showed a "rejuvenating" effect of exposing aging tissues to a young environment. In mouse heterochronic parabiosis experiments, in response to young organisms, old animals lived longer than isochrony old age-matched conjoint animals. Comparable "rejuvenating" effects were obtained by injecting young plasma in old mice. This raised great hopes of slowing down the senescence(definition) process in humans by the injection of young plasma, as well as to prevent or cure age-related diseases. Some clinical trials are currently being performed or were recently completed. However, these studies are small and of limited duration, and we still lack convincing evidence to support the effectiveness of young plasma injection. It is urgent to perform additional investigations, including the development of an assay to measure the cell proliferation induction capability of different human plasmas, before one can seriously think of a large-scale treatment of humans. We adopted a simple method to measure the potential of different plasmas in supporting cell line proliferation, regardless of the co-presence of a platelet lysate. By comparing plasmas from young and old subjects, we observed a decreased activity in plasmas from old individuals. The young plasma effect may be attributed to specific proteins and growth factors more abundant in younger individuals that could decrease with age. Alternatively, or at the same time, the reduced cell proliferation support could be due to inhibitors present in the old plasma. Studying the different protein content of young and old plasmas was out of the scope of this article. Such differences should be adequately investigated by proteomics using many samples. However, a preliminary study of the different protein content of young and old plasmas was part of the assay validation using a commercially available cytokine array for parallel determination of the relative levels of 105 selected human proteins. We could show the existence of specific differences between young and old plasmas and that plasmas from old individuals presented a higher concentration of "inflammatory" proteins.
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- DOI
- 10.3389/fbioe.2024.1408499
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- 2026-06-23 MST
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APA
Muraglia, A., Utyro, O., Nardini, M., Santolini, M., Ceresa, D., Agostini, V., Nencioni, A., Filaci, G., Cancedda, R., & Mastrogiacomo, M. (2024). A simple cell proliferation assay and the inflammatory protein content show significant differences in human plasmas from young and old subjects. <em>Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology</em>. https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2024.1408499
Vancouver
Muraglia A, Utyro O, Nardini M, Santolini M, Ceresa D, Agostini V, et al. A simple cell proliferation assay and the inflammatory protein content show significant differences in human plasmas from young and old subjects. Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology. 2024. doi:10.3389/fbioe.2024.1408499.
BibTeX
@article{anita2024Asimpl,
title = {A simple cell proliferation assay and the inflammatory protein content show significant differences in human plasmas from young and old subjects},
author = {Anita Muraglia and Olga Utyro and Marta Nardini and Marc Santolini and Davide Ceresa and Vanessa Agostini and Alessio Nencioni and Gilberto Filaci and Ranieri Cancedda and Maddalena Mastrogiacomo},
journal = {Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology},
year = {2024},
doi = {10.3389/fbioe.2024.1408499},
}
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