Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-19-2025

Abstract

Problem: Aging is characterized by a general dysregulation of systemic immune responses that increases susceptibility to infections and malignancies. Immune cells in the female genital tract (FGT) are regulated by sex hormones, but little is known about the impact of aging and menopause on immunology in the FGT. Method of Study: This study conducted an age-focused sub-analysis of cervicovaginal samples collected from 47 women enrolled in the Vaginal Mucosal Systems study in Winnipeg, Canada. Paired cervicovaginal lavage and cervical cytobrush were collected and analyzed by Luminex cytokine array, mass spectrometry based metaproteomics, metabolomics, and high dimensional flow cytometry. Results: The median age of study participants was 38 (range 19–88), with 12 over the age of 50. Increasing age was significantly correlated with increased cervicovaginal inflammation, including inflammatory cytokine MIP-1β (r = 0.335, p = 0.023), and activated T cells (CD4+HLA-DR+ r = 0406, p = 0.009; CD8+HLA-DR+ r = 0.399, p = 0.010; CD8+CD38+HLA-DR+ r = 0.386, p = 0.013). Proteomic analysis of cervicovaginal mucus identified 925 human proteins, with 108 (11.7%) significantly correlated with age. Pathway analysis indicated biofunctions related to immune response, migration, and myeloid cell phagocytosis increased with age. Interestingly, neutrophil related pathways decreased with age, including G-CSF (r = −0.396, p = 0.006) and reactive oxygen species (z-score = −2.607, p = 2.31E-4). Vaginal Lactobacillus crispatus, a species associated with mucosal health, significantly decreased with age (r = −0.340, p = 0.022), with participants over the age of 50 more likely to have non-Lactobacillus dominant microbiomes compared to those under 40. Conclusions: Together, our data suggests that there is an increase in cervicovaginal inflammation and a decrease in L. crispatus that occurs with aging.

Keywords

aging, cervicovaginal microenvironment, women's health

Language

English

Publication Title

American Journal of Reproductive Immunology

Rights

© 2025 The Author(s). This is an open access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

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