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Lifestyle intervention is associated with attenuation of ER stress/inflammation and enhancement of naive immune cell identity in older adults with metabolic disease

Yerrabelli, R.; Thibodeau, A.; Nehar-Belaid, D.; Marches, R.; Ravichandran, S.; Barnouin, Y.; Sen, R.; Paust, S.; Stitzel, M. L.; Ferrucci, L. L.; West, P.; Banchereau, J.; Villareal, D. T.; Kuchel, G. A.; Ucar, D.

2026-05-12 immunology
10.64898/2026.05.08.723786 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Chronic inflammation and cellular stress are hallmarks of aging, obesity, and type 2 diabetes (T2D), but whether these programs can be modulated by lifestyle intervention in late life, particularly in the presence of established metabolic disease, remain unknown. We profiled circulating immune cells from older adults with obesity and T2D (ages 66-83 years; n = 9) before and after a 6-month lifestyle intervention combining caloric restriction with exercise training. Participants showed substantial weight loss ([~]7%) alongside improvements in glycemic control, insulin sensitivity, and physical performance. Longitudinal single-cell transcriptomic and epigenomic profiling identified two major changes. First, intervention was associated with downregulation of inflammatory and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress transcriptional programs, with the most pronounced effects observed in CD14+ monocytes. DDIT3 (CHOP) was transcriptionally and epigenetically downregulated and its inferred regulatory network encompassed multiple inflammatory mediators. Second, naive CD4+ T, naive Treg, and naive B cells exhibited an upregulation of naive cell identity genes, with naiveness scores increasing after intervention, which declines with age in an independent healthy adult cohort. Together, these findings suggest that lifestyle intervention is associated with coordinated remodeling of both innate and adaptive immune compartments in older adults, revealing substantial plasticity of the aging immune system especially targeting ER stress, inflammation, and naive lymphocyte identity programs.

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