The Influence of Chronic Inflammation on the Hallmarks of Aging

Chronic inflammation is a feature of aging, a continual activation of the immune response without any triggering injury or infection. Many different mechanisms contribute to this state of unresolved inflammatory signaling: the accumulation of senescent cells and the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP); mitochondrial dysfunction leading to mislocalized mitochondrial DNA that triggers an innate immune reaction; signaling from visceral fat cells in those who are overweight; changes in the gut microbiome and intestinal barrier that allow microbes and microbial metabolites to provoke the immune system; and so on and so forth.

Inflammatory signaling is vital in the short term, necessary for the immune response to function correctly in the context of regeneration from injury, destruction of pathogens, and destruction of malfunctioning cells. When sustained for the long term, however, inflammatory signaling becomes increasingly disruptive to cell and tissue function. A meaningful fraction of degenerative aging results from chronic inflammation; research suggests that all of the common fatal age-related conditions have a strong inflammatory component to their pathologies.

Chronic inflammation and the hallmarks of aging

Recently, the hallmarks of aging were updated to include dysbiosis, disabled macroautophagy, and chronic inflammation. In particular, the low-grade chronic inflammation during aging, without overt infection, is defined as "inflammaging," which is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in the aging population. Emerging evidence suggests a bidirectional and cyclical relationship between chronic inflammation and the development of age-related conditions, such as cardiovascular diseases, neurodegeneration, cancer, and frailty. How the crosstalk between chronic inflammation and other hallmarks of aging underlies biological mechanisms of aging and age-related disease is thus of particular interest to the current geroscience research.

This review integrates the cellular and molecular mechanisms of age-associated chronic inflammation with the other eleven hallmarks of aging. Extra discussion is dedicated to the hallmark of "altered nutrient sensing". The deregulation of hallmark processes during aging disrupts the delicate balance between pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory signaling, leading to a persistent inflammatory state. The resultant chronic inflammation, in turn, further aggravates the dysfunction of each hallmark, thereby driving the progression of aging and age-related diseases.

The crosstalk between chronic inflammation and other hallmarks of aging results in a vicious cycle that exacerbates the decline in cellular functions and promotes aging. Understanding this complex interplay will provide new insights into the mechanisms of aging and the development of potential anti-aging interventions. Given their interconnectedness and ability to accentuate the primary elements of aging, drivers of chronic inflammation may be an ideal target with high translational potential to address the pathological conditions associated with aging.