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Aging is associated with an altered macrophage response during human skeletal muscle regeneration

Mohadeseh Ahmadi, Anders Karlsen, Jack Mehling, Casper Soendenbroe, Abigail L Mackey, Robert D Hyldahl

30 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Skeletal muscle injury in aged rodents is characterized by an asynchronous infiltration of pro- and anti-inflammatory macrophage waves, leading to improper and incomplete regeneration. It is unclear whether this aberration also occurs in aged human muscle. In this study, we quantified the macrophage responses in a human model of muscle damage and regeneration induced by electrical stimulation in 7 young and 21 older adults. At baseline, total resident macrophage (CD68+/DAPI+) content was not different between young and old subjects, but pro-inflammatory (CD206-/CD68+/DAPI+) macrophage content was lower in the old. Following damage, muscle Infiltration of CD206-/CD68+/DAPI+ macrophages was lower in old relative to young subjects. Further, only the increase in CD206-/CD68+ macrophages correlated with the change in muscle satellite cell content. Our data show that older individuals have a compromised macrophage response during muscle regeneration, pointing to an altered inflammatory response as a potential mechanism for reduced muscle regenerative efficacy in aged humans.

Original languageEnglish
Article number111974
JournalExperimental Gerontology
Volume169
Pages (from-to)111974
ISSN0531-5565
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2022

Keywords

  • Aging
  • Immunosenescence
  • Inflammation
  • Muscle damage
  • Muscle regeneration
  • Satellite cell

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