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Click the blue text above to follow us Scientists have found that people with Down syndrome have an accelerated aging of the immune system, a finding that could explain the long-observed link between Down syndrome and autoimmune diseases
.
Down syndrome is one of the most common inherited congenital disorders, affecting approximately one in every 800 births
.
Affected people usually have at least some degree of intellectual disability, but the condition can also lead to a range of health complications that can affect quality of life and longevity
.
For example, people with Down syndrome, who tend to have compromised immune systems, are at a much higher risk of developing autoimmune diseases such as type 1 diabetes than the general population
.
However, more work is currently needed to understand how Down syndrome affects the composition and aging of immune cells throughout the human lifespan
.
To answer this question, Katharina Lambert and colleagues conducted an in-depth analysis of the immune systems of 28 people with Down syndrome of various ages (2-55 years old), 25 people with type 1 diabetes, and 28 healthy volunteers
.
The researchers designed and utilized a new analytical platform called IMPACD, along with a model of immune aging called the "immune clock," that allowed them to look for unique and shared immune signatures across the cohort
.
Taken together, their deep phenotypic analysis shows that the immune systems of people with Down syndrome appear to be aging faster than expected
.
For example, these patients showed abnormal changes in the T-cell compartment typically seen in older adults, which the authors linked to an immune-signaling molecule called interleukin-6.
.
In addition, even the youngest patients with Down syndrome showed typical signs of inflammation, a low-grade inflammation that is common in older adults and increases the risk of the autoimmune system
.
Lambert et al.
suggest that the therapy may be able to suppress autoimmunity and inflammation in Down syndrome and the general population
.
They also speculate that the findings may help explain Down syndrome and other clinical differences, such as age thresholds that reduce the risk of COVID-19 outcomes
.
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