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by nextos 1158 days ago
There's a huge variability in the age of thymic involution. Some people have a relatively active thymus at age 50 or 60, whereas in others it has switched off by age 25 or 30.

For those not familiar with immunology, the thymus is what populates your immune system with brand new T cells equipped with freshly selected T cell receptors.

This suggests interesting anti-aging opportunities, such as artificial thymi to repopulate your immune system and keep a healthy and diverse repertoire.

3 comments

I wasn't aware of the variability in thymic involution. I guess most studies focus on averages. If you have links to more information about these outliers I'd be very interested in reading up on them.

The most recent literature that I'm seeing is showing the most pronounced time of thymus involution occurring around puberty, suggesting a programmed switch from a growing to reproductive phase of life.

"Regardless of the seemingly crucial role of the thymus in preserving homeostasis, its involution in humans and other mammals begins in childhood and peaks around puberty, resulting in an almost completely non-functional organ in aging." https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S156816372...

In this light the following makes sense (stopping or suppressing the switch to a reproductive life). "Castrating rodents before puberty or reducing the levels of sex hormones [e.g., by using Lupron, which desensitizes the luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) receptors] can attenuate or markedly recover the involution process in aging mice."

This study presents a gene expression marker for recent thymic emigrants and shows variability increases with age: https://insight.jci.org/articles/view/93739/figure/5

A much older study with different markers shows something similar: https://www.pnas.org/doi/epdf/10.1073/pnas.070061597

unrelated but spurred by this comment, have you seen studies exploring correlations between covid infection/severity and tonsils? a cursory google search yielded nothing.
Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells are something oncologists have been looking at to create an unlimited number of T cell's, and PSC comes from the bones, so I wonder if bone health is an indicator of immune system response? Its quite common for people to break bones and the flat bones have the red bone marrow that makes the pluripotent stem cells. They can take Mesenchymal Stem Cells and convert them in the test tube into Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells to then become T Cells in the body, but I think they have as much control over the differention of T Cells once in the body like some oncologists using radioactive iodine for thyroid cancer only to find it dispersed around the body with some congregating in the thyroid and not having teh effect they hoped for.

In todays polluted world I wonder if we dont get enough omega 3's considering the role's they play and the triterpenoid's seem interesting.

The most surprising results I've seen is with a batch of histidine, but subsequent batches didnt solicit the same results which makes me wonder if the 1st batch was something like histidine dipeptides or some other reason like cellular pools being depleted of something. Considering histidine helps immune cells move through tissue to targets, aging suggests histidine levels are depleting even if an individual is healthy.

Same goes with glutathione, in disease and aging, it also depletes to dangerously low levels, problem is bacterial biofilms love it to reactivate themselves and until recently it was thought supplementing was a waste, but recent studies contradict this idea.