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Effect of aging on pulmonary cellular responses during mechanical ventilation
Aminmohamed Manji, Lefeng Wang, Cynthia M. Pape, Lynda A. McCaig, Alexandra Troitskaya, Onon Batnyam, Leah J.J. McDonald, C. Thomas Appleton, Ruud A.W. Veldhuizen, Sean E. Gill
Aminmohamed Manji, Lefeng Wang, Cynthia M. Pape, Lynda A. McCaig, Alexandra Troitskaya, Onon Batnyam, Leah J.J. McDonald, C. Thomas Appleton, Ruud A.W. Veldhuizen, Sean E. Gill
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Research Article Aging Pulmonology Vascular biology

Effect of aging on pulmonary cellular responses during mechanical ventilation

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Abstract

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) results in substantial morbidity and mortality, especially in elderly people. Mechanical ventilation, a common supportive treatment for ARDS, is necessary for maintaining gas exchange but can also propagate injury. We hypothesized that aging leads to alterations in surfactant function, inflammatory signaling, and microvascular permeability within the lung during mechanical ventilation. Young and aged male mice were mechanically ventilated, and surfactant function, inflammation, and vascular permeability were assessed. Additionally, single-cell RNA-Seq was used to delineate cell-specific transcriptional changes. The results showed that, in aged mice, surfactant dysfunction and vascular permeability were significantly augmented, while inflammation was less pronounced. Differential gene expression and pathway analyses revealed that alveolar macrophages in aged mice showed a blunted inflammatory response, while aged endothelial cells exhibited altered cell-cell junction formation. In vitro functional analysis revealed that aged endothelial cells had an impaired ability to form a barrier. These results highlight the complex interplay between aging and mechanical ventilation, including an age-related predisposition to endothelial barrier dysfunction, due to altered cell-cell junction formation, and decreased inflammation, potentially due to immune exhaustion. It is concluded that age-related vascular changes may underlie the increased susceptibility to injury during mechanical ventilation in elderly patients.

Authors

Aminmohamed Manji, Lefeng Wang, Cynthia M. Pape, Lynda A. McCaig, Alexandra Troitskaya, Onon Batnyam, Leah J.J. McDonald, C. Thomas Appleton, Ruud A.W. Veldhuizen, Sean E. Gill

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Figure 9

Effect of age on the transcriptomic response to mechanical ventilation in alveolar macrophages.

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Effect of age on the transcriptomic response to mechanical ventilation i...
(A and B) The volcano plots reveal many significantly differentially expressed genes in macrophages from the young animals following mechanical ventilation (A), with far fewer genes observed in the macrophages from the aged animals (B). (C) The heatmap highlighting enriched pathway terms regulated by differentially expressed genes in the alveolar macrophages demonstrates greater enrichment of inflammatory and activation pathways in the young mice exposed to mechanical ventilation, which is reduced in the aged mice. (D) The Circos plot displaying the degree of overlap of functional pathways between the young and aged animals in response to mechanical ventilation reveals high overlap of genes (blue lines) and pathways (purple lines) in the aged animals, as well as an abundance of genes and pathways exclusive to young animals. YNV, young nonventilated; YV, young ventilated; ANV, aged nonventilated; AV, aged ventilated.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN 2379-3708

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