Open access · OA
via Europe PMC
Spermidine Mitigates Immune Cell Senescence and Boosts Vaccine Responses in Healthy Older Adults-A Pilot Study.
Alsaleh G, Ali M, Kayvanjoo AH, Liu F, Moreau T, Bibi S, Luo L, Govender M, Carroll M, Hofer SJ, Tobias E, Magnes C, Kell L, Chung C, Deng Y
Aging cell · 2026
Genomic instability
Disabled macroautophagy
Deregulated nutrient-sensing
Cellular senescence
Chronic inflammation
Spermidine
Human
Randomized controlled trial
Preclinical / animal
Abstract
Older adults are highly vulnerable to infectious diseases, and vaccines are often less effective in this population because of diminished B and T cell memory responses driven by impaired autophagy(definition), immunosenescence, and chronic low-grade inflammation. Spermidine has been shown to counteract immunosenescence and induce autophagy in preclinical models, and its levels decline with age in humans. We conducted a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled pilot study in 40 adults over 65 years of age following their third SARS-CoV-2 vaccine dose to assess the safety of Spermidine and its effects on vaccine-induced immunity. Daily oral supplementation (6 mg, 13 weeks) was well-tolerated. Vaccine non-responsiveness was common, and non-responders exhibited a distinct immune-senescence(definition) signature marked by elevated p16, mTOR(definition) signalling, and γ-H2AX+ DNA damage in lymphocytes. Spermidine reversed these features and significantly enhanced spike-specific IgG secretion, memory B cell recall responses and neutralising antibody activity, specifically in non-responders. Single-cell RNA-seq after treatment revealed increased expression of TFEB targets and autophagy-related genes in B cells, in line with elevated autophagic flux. These findings suggest that targeting immune cell senescence with Spermidine may improve vaccine responsiveness in older adults and highlight immune-senescence markers as potential predictors of vaccine failure in ageing populations.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- Europe PMC
- DOI
- 10.1111/acel.70545
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-07-01 MST
Cite this
APA
G, A., M, A., AH, K., F, L., T, M., S, B., L, L., M, G., M, C., SJ, H., E, T., C, M., L, K., C, C., Y, D., A, B., L, G., T, C., L, C., & B, K. (2026). Spermidine Mitigates Immune Cell Senescence and Boosts Vaccine Responses in Healthy Older Adults-A Pilot Study. <em>Aging cell</em>. https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.70545
Vancouver
G A, M A, AH K, F L, T M, S B, et al. Spermidine Mitigates Immune Cell Senescence and Boosts Vaccine Responses in Healthy Older Adults-A Pilot Study. Aging cell. 2026. doi:10.1111/acel.70545.
BibTeX
@article{alsaleh2026Spermi,
title = {Spermidine Mitigates Immune Cell Senescence and Boosts Vaccine Responses in Healthy Older Adults-A Pilot Study.},
author = {Alsaleh G and Ali M and Kayvanjoo AH and Liu F and Moreau T and Bibi S and Luo L and Govender M and Carroll M and Hofer SJ and Tobias E and Magnes C and Kell L and Chung C and Deng Y and Bhandari A and Garner L and Conrad T and Chen L and Kronsteiner-Dobramysl B and Dunachie S and Spiller OB and Lambe T and Klenerman P and Jones LC},
journal = {Aging cell},
year = {2026},
doi = {10.1111/acel.70545},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Caitlin Bowman 2026
Open access · US-GOV
Effects of Older Age on the Neural Basis of Memory Generalization
JAMA Network Open 2022
Open access · CC-BY
Effects of Spermidine Supplementation on Cognition and Biomarkers in Older Adults With Subjective Cognitive Decline
Cell Metabolism 2024
Preprint · OA
Brain responses to intermittent fasting and the healthy living diet in older adults
Immunity & Ageing 2023
Open access · CC-BY
The effect of metformin on influenza vaccine responses in nondiabetic older adults: a pilot trial
Nature Communications 2018
Open access · CC-BY
Chronic nicotinamide riboside supplementation is well-tolerated and elevates NAD+ in healthy middle-aged and older adults
The Journal of Immunology 2000
Citation only