Conexiant
Login
  • The Analytical Scientist
  • The Cannabis Scientist
  • The Medicine Maker
  • The Ophthalmologist
  • The Pathologist
  • The Traditional Scientist
The Analytical Scientist
  • Explore

    Explore

    • Latest
    • News & Research
    • Trends & Challenges
    • Keynote Interviews
    • Opinion & Personal Narratives
    • Product Profiles
    • App Notes
    • The Product Book

    Featured Topics

    • Mass Spectrometry
    • Chromatography
    • Spectroscopy

    Issues

    • Latest Issue
    • Archive
  • Topics

    Techniques & Tools

    • Mass Spectrometry
    • Chromatography
    • Spectroscopy
    • Microscopy
    • Sensors
    • Data and AI

    • View All Topics

    Applications & Fields

    • Clinical
    • Environmental
    • Food, Beverage & Agriculture
    • Pharma and Biopharma
    • Omics
    • Forensics
  • People & Profiles

    People & Profiles

    • Power List
    • Voices in the Community
    • Sitting Down With
    • Authors & Contributors
  • Business & Education

    Business & Education

    • Innovation
    • Business & Entrepreneurship
    • Career Pathways
  • Events
    • Live Events
    • Webinars
  • Multimedia
    • Video
    • Content Hubs
Subscribe
Subscribe

False

The Analytical Scientist / Issues / 2026 / January / At What Age Do We Have the Strongest Immunity?
Data and AI Translational Science News and Research

At What Age Do We Have the Strongest Immunity?

A multi-omic study defines the immune system’s lifelong trajectory

01/09/2026 3 min read

Share

A study published in Nature maps how immune profiles change across adulthood, offering a reference point for interpreting age-related differences in serology, cellular phenotyping, and vaccine responses.

Investigators profiled peripheral immunity in more than 300 healthy adults (ages 25 to 90) using a multi-omic approach comprising single-cell RNA sequencing, plasma proteomics, and flow cytometry. A subset of 96 participants was followed longitudinally for two years around seasonal influenza vaccination.

The dataset comprises more than 16 million single cells spanning 71 immune subsets and reveals non-linear, age-associated transcriptional reprogramming most prominently within T cells. Notably, these shifts were not explained by systemic inflammation or cytomegalovirus status in midlife, and were linked to a T helper 2 (TH2) bias in memory T cells associated with altered B-cell vaccine responses.

Circulating protein profiles showed persistent age-associated differences, including increases in markers such as CXCL17, WNT9A, and GDF15. However, classic inflammatory cytokines (TNF, IL-6, IL-1B) were not elevated in this cohort prior to advanced age. These patterns remained stable over one year, suggesting that commonly used inflammatory readouts might not capture early immune aging.

Analysis of more than 13 million single immune cells showed that T cells undergo the most pronounced molecular changes with age. These changes were different from those related to sex, cytomegalovirus infection, or recent vaccination. Researchers developed an RNA Age Metric (RAM) – a combined measure of gene activity that reflects “immune age.” In older adults, this score stayed consistently higher over a two-year period, suggesting it could be a useful way to assess immune system aging beyond simply counting cell types.

A second group of 234 adults (ages 40 to over 90) confirmed these findings. With age, naïve CD8 cells decreased, while age-associated B cells increased. The RNA Age Metric also rose across different T-cell types, following a non-linear pattern. Certain genes, such as PTGER2 and SESN3, were more active with age. Similar changes appeared in lymph node T cells, indicating that these molecular shifts occur throughout the immune system – not just in the blood. The same pattern was seen in people at risk of rheumatoid arthritis, suggesting that the RNA Age Metric could help identify early immune aging even before disease develops.

Influenza vaccination analyses highlighted diagnostic nuances: older adults showed fewer high responders for the repeatedly boosted B/Phuket strain, despite broadly intact responses otherwise. Transcriptomic and protein data pointed to reduced activation and IgG class switching in CD27– effector memory B cells, with a skewed IgG2/IgG3 ratio in older adults. These B-cell features correlated with T-cell reprogramming and an increased TH2-like state in CD4 central memory cells with age.

The study showed that age affects many immune measurements, including baseline protein levels, the mix of immune cell types, and how antibody types change after vaccination. These shifts can occur even without signs of inflammation, such as increased cytokines. The authors suggest that using age-adjusted reference data and combined molecular measures – like the RNA Age Metric – could help laboratories and clinicians interpret immune tests more accurately, improve vaccine response evaluation, and detect early signs of immune dysfunction in adults.

Newsletters

Receive the latest analytical science news, personalities, education, and career development – weekly to your inbox.

Newsletter Signup Image

False

Advertisement

Recommended

False

Related Content

The Analytical Scientist Innovation Awards 2024: #5
Data and AI
The Analytical Scientist Innovation Awards 2024: #5

December 4, 2024

4 min read

Welcome to the 5th ranked Innovation, Pyxis – introduced here by Matterworks co-founder Jack Geremia

The Climate Conversation: Part Two – Michael Gonsior
Data and AI
The Climate Conversation: Part Two – Michael Gonsior

December 5, 2024

7 min read

In the second part of our interview, Michael Gonsior explores the pressing challenges in carbon cycle research, transformative tools and technologies, as well as analytical glimmers of hope

Green is Digital
Data and AI
Green is Digital

December 16, 2024

4 min read

Software tools can optimize resource management, streamline workflow processes, predict outcomes, and optimize experimental conditions – contributing to more sustainable laboratory operations

Could AI Ever Replace The Analytical Scientist?
Data and AI
Could AI Ever Replace The Analytical Scientist?

December 18, 2024

1 min read

Working closely with an ever-expanding network of experts helps keep our content relevant and engaging. And keeps artificial intelligence at bay, right?!

False

The Analytical Scientist
Subscribe

About

  • About Us
  • Work at Conexiant Europe
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2026 Texere Publishing Limited (trading as Conexiant), with registered number 08113419 whose registered office is at Booths No. 1, Booths Park, Chelford Road, Knutsford, England, WA16 8GS.