Perceived stress, cytomegalovirus titers, and late-differentiated T and NK cells: Between-, within-person associations in a longitudinal study of older adults

•Higher CMV titers across waves associated with higher levels of aged T and NK cells.•Higher CMV titers within-person associated with lower levels of aged T cells.•Higher perceived stress across waves associated with higher levels of aged T cells.•Stressed older adults had higher proportions of aged...

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Published inBrain, behavior, and immunity Vol. 80; pp. 266 - 274
Main Authors Reed, Rebecca G., Presnell, Steven R., Al-Attar, Ahmad, Lutz, Charles T., Segerstrom, Suzanne C.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier Inc 01.08.2019
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Summary:•Higher CMV titers across waves associated with higher levels of aged T and NK cells.•Higher CMV titers within-person associated with lower levels of aged T cells.•Higher perceived stress across waves associated with higher levels of aged T cells.•Stressed older adults had higher proportions of aged T cells regardless of CMV control. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) and psychological stress are implicated as drivers of immunological aging. It is unknown, however, whether associations among CMV titers, stress, and immune aging are more stable or dynamic over time. The present investigation tested the between-person (stable differences) and within-person (dynamic fluctuations) associations of CMV titers and perceived stress on late-differentiated T and natural killer (NK) peripheral blood cells in a longitudinal study of older adults aged 64–92 years (N = 149). Participants reported stress levels and provided blood biannually for 2.5 years (up to 5 waves per person) to assess CMV IgG titers and composites of late-differentiated CD8 T cells (CD28- and CD57 + subsets) and CD56dim NK cells (CD57+, NKG2C+, and FcεRIγ- subsets). In multilevel models that controlled for demographic variables, higher CMV titers were associated with higher proportions and counts of aged T and NK cells between people and lower counts of aged T cells within people. Perceived stress was associated with higher counts of aged T cells between people, but was not associated with aged NK cells. A significant interaction between stress and CMV titers on T cells between people indicated that older adults with lower stress levels and lower CMV titers had the lowest proportions of late-differentiated T cells, whereas those with higher stress levels had high proportions, regardless of CMV control. Our results provide evidence for longer-term, between-person associations among CMV titers, stress, and immunological aging, rather than dynamic within-person associations. We propose that targeting factors that promote low, stable perceived stress in older adults may retard T cell differentiation and ultimately support healthy aging.
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ISSN:0889-1591
1090-2139
DOI:10.1016/j.bbi.2019.03.018