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In aged primary T cells, mitochondrial stress contributes to telomere attrition measured by a novel imaging flow cytometry assay
Sharon Sanderson, Anna Katharina Simon
Aging Cell · 2017 · ▲ 59 citations
Telomere attrition
Disabled macroautophagy
Mitochondrial dysfunction
Cellular senescence
Cell culture / in vitro
Human
In vitro
Abstract
Summary The decline of the immune system with age known as immune senescence(definition) contributes to inefficient pathogen clearance and is a key risk factor for many aged‐related diseases. However, reversing or halting immune aging requires more knowledge about the cell biology of senescence in immune cells. Telomere(definition) shortening, low autophagy(definition) and mitochondrial dysfunction(definition) have been shown to underpin cell senescence. While autophagy has been found to control mitochondrial damage, no link has been made to telomere attrition. In contrast, mitochondrial stress can contribute to telomere attrition and vice versa. Whereas this link has been investigated in fibroblasts or cell lines, it is unclear whether this link exists in primary cells such as human lymphocytes and whether autophagy contributes to it. As traditional methods for measuring telomere length are low throughput or unsuitable for the analysis of cell subtypes within a mixed population of primary cells, we have developed a novel sensitive flow‐ FISH assay using the imaging flow cytometer. Using this assay, we show a correlation between age and increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species in CD 8 + T‐cell subsets, but not with autophagy. Telomere shortening within the CD 8 + subset could be prevented in vitro by treatment with a ROS scavenger. Our novel assay is a sensitive assay to measure relative telomere length in primary cells and has revealed ROS as a contributing factor to the decline in telomere length.
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- DOI
- 10.1111/acel.12640
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- 2026-06-02 MST
Cite this
APA
Sanderson, S., & Simon, A.K. (2017). In aged primary T cells, mitochondrial stress contributes to telomere attrition measured by a novel imaging flow cytometry assay. <em>Aging Cell</em>. https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.12640
Vancouver
Sanderson S, Simon AK. In aged primary T cells, mitochondrial stress contributes to telomere attrition measured by a novel imaging flow cytometry assay. Aging Cell. 2017. doi:10.1111/acel.12640.
BibTeX
@article{sharon2017Inaged,
title = {In aged primary T cells, mitochondrial stress contributes to telomere attrition measured by a novel imaging flow cytometry assay},
author = {Sharon Sanderson and Anna Katharina Simon},
journal = {Aging Cell},
year = {2017},
doi = {10.1111/acel.12640},
}
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