Aging & Longevity
Monocytes can efficiently replace all brain macrophages and fetal liver monocytes can generate bona fide SALL1<sup>+</sup> microglia
Microglia and border-associated macrophages (BAMs) are critical for brain health, and their dysfunction is associated to disease. Replacing brain macrophages holds substantial therapeutic promise but remains challenging. Here, we demonstrate that monocytes can efficiently replace all brain macrophages. Monocytes readily replaced embryonal BAMs upon their depletion and engrafted as monocyte-derived microglia (Mo-Microglia) upon more sustained niche availability. Mo-Microglia expanded comparably...
Inducing mechanical self-healing in polymer glasses
Polymer glasses such as the plastics used in pipes, structural materials, and medical devices are ubiquitous in daily life. The nature of their low molecular mobility is still poorly understood and it leads to brittle mechanical behavior, damage, and fracture over time. It also prevents the design of self-healing mechanisms that expand the material's lifespan, as more commonly done in recent years for higher mobility amorphous polymers such as gels and rubbers. We demonstrate through numerical...
Fibroblast dynamics during mammary oncogenesis: senescence, Wnt9a and beyond
No abstract
Aging promotes reactivation of the Barr body at distal chromosome regions
Decades ago, evidence of age-related reactivation of a single gene on the female inactive X chromosome was observed in mice. While stable silencing of the Barr body is crucial for balancing gene dosage between sexes, it remains unclear whether silencing is maintained during aging. Here we used allele-specific multi-omics approaches to capture a comprehensive catalog of genes escaping X chromosome inactivation throughout mouse development and aging. We found substantially elevated escape rates...
Global genetic diversity of human gut microbiome species is related to geographic location and host health
The human gut harbors thousands of microbial species, each exhibiting significant inter-individual genetic variability. Although many studies have associated microbial relative abundances with human-health-related phenotypes, the substantial intraspecies genetic variability of gut microbes has not yet been comprehensively considered, limiting the potential of linking such genetic traits with host conditions. Here, we analyzed 32,152 metagenomes from 94 microbiome studies across the globe to...
NAD depletion in skeletal muscle does not compromise muscle function or accelerate aging
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) is a ubiquitous electron carrier essential for energy metabolism and post-translational modification of numerous regulatory proteins. Dysregulations of NAD metabolism are widely regarded as detrimental to health, with NAD depletion commonly implicated in aging. However, the extent to which cellular NAD concentration can decline without adverse consequences remains unclear. To investigate this, we generated a mouse model in which nicotinamide...
All-Cause Acute Illness Hospitalisations in the Preceding Two Years Are Associated With Cognitive Decline in Older Adults: The Sydney Memory and Ageing Study
CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms and adds nuance to international findings that overnight hospitalization is associated with accelerated cognitive decline. This association was dose-dependent, had a recency effect and was independent of illness severity in the case of cLOS. These findings suggest that all-cause acute hospitalization may be a reversible risk factor for cognitive decline. This needs further clarification and the development of interventions to minimise the impact of acute illness...
Geriatric-led transitional care for older adults discharged from the emergency department: impact on hospital readmissions and disability. Protocol for the controlled prospective quasi-experimental study LASUITE
BACKGROUND: Even when older people are discharged directly home after an emergency department (ED) visit, the risk of deterioration of health status and loss of independence persists. We hypothesize that among older adults discharged from the ED, hospital-community transition care provided by geriatric mobile teams (GMTs) may reduce the early readmission rate and level of disability. Such approaches have rarely been evaluated and cannot be generalized yet. Providing evidence of the positive...
Synaptic vesicle-omics in mice captures signatures of aging and synucleinopathy
Neurotransmitter release occurs through exocytosis of synaptic vesicles. α-Synuclein's function and dysfunction in Parkinson's disease and other synucleinopathies is thought to be tightly linked to synaptic vesicle binding. Age is the biggest risk factor for synucleinopathy, and ~15% of synaptic vesicle proteins have been linked to central nervous system diseases. Yet, age- and disease-induced changes in synaptic vesicles remain unexplored. Via systematic analysis of synaptic vesicles at the...
Aging-Associated Vacuolation of Multi-Ciliated Cells in the Distal Mouse Oviduct Reflects Unique Cell Identity and Luminal Microenvironment
The female reproductive organs present with the earliest aging characteristics, such as a decline in fertility and estrous cyclicity. While age-related changes in the ovary are well documented, it is unclear if any age-associated changes occur in the other female reproductive organs, such as the oviduct/Fallopian tube. At the distal end of aged oviducts in mice, we found vacuolated multi-ciliated cells (MCCs) with a severely apically displaced and deformed nucleus. This phenotype was unique to...
The effect of enhanced glycolysis on cardiac aging
Cardiac aging is associated with metabolic changes, including an increased reliance on glycolysis, and an increased susceptibility to cardiovascular diseases. This study explores the relationship between enhanced cardiac glycolysis and aging using the Glyco^(Hi) mouse model, characterized by constitutively elevated glycolysis. We compared cardiac function, metabolism, mitochondrial performance, and hallmarks of aging between aged (21 and 24 months) Glyco^(Hi) and wild-type (WT) mice across...
Seasonal and comparative evidence of adaptive gene expression in mammalian brain size plasticity
Contrasting almost all other mammalian wintering strategies, Eurasian common shrews, Sorex araneus, endure winter by shrinking their brain, skull, and most organs, only to then regrow to breeding size the following spring. How such tiny mammals achieve this unique brain size plasticity while maintaining activity through the winter remains unknown. To discover potential adaptations underlying this trait, we analyzed seasonal differential gene expression in the shrew hypothalamus, a brain region...
Identifying Age-Modulating Compounds Using a Novel Computational Framework for Evaluating Transcriptional Age
The differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) provides access to a wide range of cell types and tissues. However, hPSC-derived lineages typically represent a fetal stage of development, and methods to expedite the transition to an aged identity to improve modeling of late-onset disease are limited. In this study, we introduce RNAge, a transcriptome-based computational platform designed to enable the evaluation of an induced aging or a rejuvenated state. We validated this approach...
Corrigendum: Cerebrovascular burden and neurodegeneration linked to 15-year odor identification decline in older adults
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2025.1539508.].
Editorial: Similarities and differences between cellular and molecular mechanisms of normal brain aging and neurodegeneration
No abstract
Ethnicity and frailty: A systematic review of association with prevalence, incidence, trajectories and risks
CONCLUSION: Ethnic disparities in frailty prevalence persist across community-based settings in different countries and are not fully explained by known inequalities. Addressing these disparities will likely require careful frailty measurement and assessment; confronting structural inequalities; and tailoring interventions to the needs of minoritised populations.
High-entropy sulfoselenide as negative electrodes with fast kinetics and high stability for sodium-ion batteries
Conversion electrodes offer higher reversible capacity and lower cost than conventional intercalation chemistry electrodes, but suffer from kinetic limitation and large volume expansion. Despite significant efforts, developing conversion electrodes with fast charging capability and extended lifespan remains challenging. Here, by leveraging the advantages of high-entropy doping and morphology tailoring, we develop a high-entropy hierarchical micro/nanostructured sulfoselenide...
KLRG1 identifies regulatory T cells with mitochondrial alterations that accumulate with aging
Recent studies using single-cell RNA sequencing technology have uncovered several subpopulations of CD4^(+) T cells that accumulate with aging. These age-associated T cells are emerging as relevant players in the onset of inflammaging and tissue senescence. Here, based on information provided by single-cell RNA sequencing data, we present a flow cytometry panel that allows the identification of age-associated T cell subsets in systematic larger analysis in mice. We use this panel to evaluate at...
The distribution of subsurface microplastics in the ocean
Marine plastic pollution is a global issue, with microplastics (1 µm-5 mm) dominating the measured plastic count^(1,2). Although microplastics can be found throughout the oceanic water column^(3,4), most studies collect microplastics from surface waters (less than about 50-cm depth) using net tows⁵. Consequently, our understanding of the microplastics distribution across ocean depths is more limited. Here we synthesize depth-profile data from 1,885 stations collected between 2014 and 2024 to...
Global evolution of inflammatory bowel disease across epidemiologic stages
During the twentieth century, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was considered a disease of early industrialized regions in North America, Europe and Oceania¹. At the turn of the twenty-first century, IBD incidence increased in newly industrialized and emerging regions in Africa, Asia and Latin America, while the prevalence in early industrialized regions continued to grow steadily^(2-4). Changes in the incidence and prevalence denote the evolution of IBD across four epidemiologic stages: stage 1...
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