Platelet Factor 4, an Interesting Target for Modest Rejuvenation of the Aging Brain
The ability of PF4 to reduce chronic inflammation and restore some degree of lost function in the aging brain has been a topic of interest for a few years now. We'll likely be hearing much more in the years ahead as researchers move from investigation to attempts to build therapies based on the direct upregulation of PF4 expression. That said, one might look at the decades it has taken investigations of klotho to move from interesting science to initial attempts at clinical applications. Biotechnology is not a field known for rapid progress from lab to clinic.
Platelet factor 4 (PF4), a platelet-derived chemokine found in the blood, has been identified as a critical factor in modulating the rejuvenation of the aged brain. Increasing evidence suggests that PF4 secretion is a prerequisite for the cognitive benefits associated with young blood transfusion, the longevity factor klotho, and exercise. Systemic administration of exogenous PF4 has been shown to reduce circulating pro-aging immune factors and restore peripheral immune function in the aged brain by mitigating age-related hippocampal neuroinflammation, promoting molecular changes in synaptic plasticity, and improving cognitive function in aged mice.
Clinically, reduced serum PF4 levels have been significantly associated with cognitive decline and core pathological biomarkers in Alzheimer's disease. Mechanistically, the chemokine receptor CXCR3 partially mediates the cellular, molecular, and cognitive benefits of systemic PF4 administration in the aged brain. However, several critical questions remain, including the potential role of PF4 in blood-brain communication, its interaction with neurotransmitters and neuropharmacological processes, and how these findings might be translated into clinical practice.
Aspirin use lowers PF4
Some of the other blood thinners do too
https://apjai-journal.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/AP-261024-1959.pdf
Platelet Factor 4 and Longevity of Patients with Essential Thromobocythemia: An Example of Antagonistic Pathogenic Pleiotropy
William Bains 1
Affiliations expand
PMID: 38581429 DOI: 10.1089/rej.2023.0066
Abstract
This article presents the concept of Antagonistic Pathogenic Pleiotropy, in which an abnormality that causes a specific pathology can simultaneously reduce other morbidities through unrelated mechanisms, resulting in the pathology causing less morbidity or mortality than expected. The concept is illustrated by the case of essential thrombocythemia (ET). Patients with ET have substantially elevated platelets and are therefore expected to have increased thrombotic events leading to reduced life expectancy. However, patients with ET do not have reduced life expectancy. A possible explanation is that elevated platelets produce higher levels of platelet factor 4 (PF4), which has been found to reduce age-associated decline in immune and cognitive function in mice and has been suggested as a treatment for age-associated illness. The benefit of elevated PF4 is hypothesized to balance the increased morbidity from hematological causes. Searches for other indications where a well-defined pathology is not associated with concomitant reduction in overall mortality may be a route to identifying factors that could protect against, prevent, or treat chronic disease.