Women live longer than men partly because their immune systems age more slowly, a new study has revealed.
As their body defences weaken with the passing years, the increasing
susceptibility of men to disease shortens their lives, it is claimed.
Life expectancy in the UK is 79 years for men and 82 for women, according to the World Health Organisation.
In Japan, where the research took place, the gap is wider. There, the
average lifespan of men is the same as in the UK, but women live to
85.5.
The study involved examining blood samples from healthy volunteers with a wide range of ages.
Scientists tested the blood of 356 men and women aged between 20 and
90 and looked at levels of white blood cells and immune system
signalling molecules called cytokines.
In both sexes, the number of white blood cells per person decreased
with age, but closer study revealed striking differences between men and
women.
The rate of decline of most T-cell and B-cell lymphocytes, two key elements of the immune system, was faster in men.
Similarly, men showed a more rapid age-related decline in the two cytokines, IL-6 and IL-10.
Two specific types of immune system cell that actively destroy
foreign invaders, CD4 T-cells and natural killer (NK) cells, increased
in number with age. In this case, the rate of increase was higher in
women than in men.
NK cells are believed to be one of the body's first lines of defence against cancer.
The research, led by Professor Katsuiku Hirokawa, from Tokyo Medical
and Dental University, appears in the online journal Immunity and
Ageing.
The scientists wrote: 'Age-related changes in various immunological
parameters differ between men and women. Our findings indicate that the
slower rate of decline in these immunological parameters in women than
in men is consistent with the fact that women live longer than do men.'
Immune system mechanisms not only protect the body from infection and cancer, but can cause disease when not properly regulated.
Inflammation is a potentially damaging immune system response that
contributes to heart and artery disease and could play a role in
dementia.
The cytokine IL-10 is an important regulator of inflammation, helping
to put the brakes on the immune system to keep it under control.
Its faster decline in men suggests that as men age they might more rapidly be affected by inflammatory conditions.
Professor Hirokawa said: 'The process of ageing is different for men
and women for many reasons. Women have more oestrogen than men which
seems to protect them from cardiovascular disease until menopause. Sex
hormones also affect the immune system, especially certain types of
lymphocytes.
'Because people age at different rates, a person's immunological
parameters could be used to provide an indication of their true
biological age.'
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