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The effect of ageing on human lymphocyte subsets: comparison of males and females

Jun Yan1 email, Judith M Greer1 email, Renee Hull3 email, John D O'Sullivan1,3 email, Robert D Henderson1,3 email, Stephen J Read3 email and Pamela A McCombe1,2,3 email

The University of Queensland, UQ Centre for Clinical Research, Royal Brisbane & Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia

Wesley Research Institute, Wesley Hospital, Brisbane, Australia

Department of Neurology, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia

author email corresponding author email

Immunity & Ageing 2010, 7:4doi:10.1186/1742-4933-7-4

Published: 16 March 2010

Abstract

Background

There is reported to be a decline in immune function and an alteration in the frequency of circulating lymphocytes with advancing age. There are also differences in ageing and lifespan between males and females. We performed this study to see if there were differences between males and females in the frequency of the different lymphocyte subsets with age.

Results

Using flow cytometry we have examined different populations of peripheral blood leukocytes purified from healthy subjects with age ranging from the third to the tenth decade. We used linear regression analysis to determine if there is a linear relationship between age and cell frequencies. For the whole group, we find that with age there is a significant decline in the percentage of naïve T cells and CD8+ T cells, and an increase in the percentage of effector memory cells, CD4+foxp3+ T cells and NK cells. For all cells where there was an effect of ageing, the slope of the curve was greater for men than for women and this was statistically significant for CD8+αβ+ T cells and CD3+CD45RA-CCR7- effector memory cells. There was also a difference for naïve cells but this was not significant.

Conclusion

The cause of the change in percentage of lymphocyte subsets with age, and the different effects on males and females is not fully understood but warrants further study.


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