Aging & Longevity

Helios-Illuminating the way for lymphocyte self-control

2 months 2 weeks ago
Transcription factor Helios, encoded by the IKZF2 gene, has an important role in regulatory T cells by stabilizing their suppressive phenotype. While Helios is prominently expressed in regulatory T cells, its expression extends beyond to include effector T cells, follicular regulatory T cells, B cells, and innate-like lymphocyte populations. Recent characterizations of patients with inborn error of immunity due to damaging IKZF2 variants coupled with translational research on lymphocytes from...
Iivo Hetemäki

Nuclear envelope budding inhibition slows down progerin-induced aging process

2 months 2 weeks ago
Progerin causes Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS), but how progerin accelerates aging is still an interesting question. Here, we provide evidence linking nuclear envelope (NE) budding and accelerated aging. Mechanistically, progerin disrupts nuclear lamina to induce NE budding in concert with lamin A/C, resulting in transport of chromatin into the cytoplasm where it is removed via autophagy, whereas emerin antagonizes this process. Primary cells from both HGPS patients and mouse models...
Xiangyang Wang

Alzheimer's disease-linked risk alleles elevate microglial cGAS-associated senescence and neurodegeneration in a tauopathy model

2 months 2 weeks ago
The strongest risk factors for late-onset sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) include the ε4 allele of apolipoprotein E (APOE), the R47H variant of triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2), and female sex. Here, we combine APOE4 and TREM2^(R47H) (R47H) in female P301S tauopathy mice to identify the pathways activated when AD risk is the strongest, thereby highlighting detrimental disease mechanisms. We find that R47H induces neurodegeneration in 9- to 10-month-old female APOE4...
Gillian K Carling

An atlas of the aging mouse proteome reveals the features of age-related post-transcriptional dysregulation

2 months 2 weeks ago
To what extent and how post-transcriptional dysregulation affects aging proteome remains unclear. Here, we provide proteomic data of whole-tissue lysates (WTL) and low-solubility protein-enriched fractions (LSF) of major tissues collected from mice of 6, 15, 24, and 30 months of age. Low-solubility proteins are preferentially affected by age and the analysis of LSF doubles the number of proteins identified to be differentially expressed with age. Simultaneous analysis of proteome and...
Masaki Takasugi

Inhibition of poly(ADP-Ribosyl)ation reduced vascular smooth muscle cells loss and improves aortic disease in a mouse model of human accelerated aging syndrome

2 months 2 weeks ago
Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) is an extremely rare genetic disorder associated with features of accelerated aging. HGPS is an autosomal dominant disease caused by a de novo mutation of LMNA gene, encoding A-type lamins, resulting in the truncated form of pre-lamin A called progerin. While asymptomatic at birth, patients develop symptoms within the first year of life when they begin to display accelerated aging and suffer from growth retardation, and severe cardiovascular...
Déborah Cardoso

Aging enhances pro-atrogenic gene expression and skeletal muscle loss following respiratory syncytial virus infection

2 months 2 weeks ago
Aging and many age-related health conditions are associated with skeletal muscle loss. Furthermore, older adults are more susceptible to severe respiratory infections, which can in turn lead to muscle wasting. The mechanisms by which respiratory viral infection can impact skeletal muscle in older adults are not well understood. We determined the effects of acute infection with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) on the lung and skeletal muscle of aged mice. RSV infection caused more severe disease...
J Sophie Sagawe

The effectiveness of unsupervised home-based exercise for improving lower extremity physical function in older adults in Western and Eastern cultures: a systematic review and meta-analysis

2 months 2 weeks ago
CONCLUSIONS: This meta-analysis suggests that unsupervised home-based exercise programmes have little impact on lower extremity functions in older adults. This review is limited by the small number of included studies, sample sizes, and high heterogeneity. There is a need to understand why this format lacks efficacy, and design more beneficial home-based exercise programmes.
Ian Ju Liang

Inflammation and aging-related disease: A transdisciplinary inflammaging framework

2 months 2 weeks ago
Inflammaging, a state of chronic, progressive low-grade inflammation during aging, is associated with several adverse clinical outcomes, including frailty, disability, and death. Chronic inflammation is a hallmark of aging and is linked to the pathogenesis of many aging-related diseases. Anti-inflammatory therapies are also increasingly being studied as potential anti-aging treatments, and clinical trials have shown benefits in selected aging-related diseases. Despite promising advances,...
Brian J Andonian

Healthy Aging at Moderate Altitudes: Hypoxia and Hormesis

2 months 3 weeks ago
BACKGROUND: Aging is associated with cellular and tissue responses that collectively lead to functional and structural deterioration of tissues. Poor tissue oxygenation, or hypoxia, is involved in such responses and contributes to aging. Consequently, it could be speculated that living at higher altitude, and therefore in hypoxic conditions, accelerates aging. This assumption is indeed supported by evidence from populations residing at very high altitudes (>3,500 m). In contrast, accumulating...
Johannes Burtscher

Mild Behavioral Impairment and Quality of Life in Community Dwelling Older Adults

2 months 3 weeks ago
CONCLUSIONS: The study shows that MBI is associated with poorer QoL, independent of sex, on two QoL scales. We addressed depression/anxiety items in the EQ-5D as a potential confounder for the observed MBI-QoL association by conducting a sensitivity analysis that excluded those items from the EQ-5D total score and by employing a novel measure of QoL (QFS-5) that excludes psychiatric symptoms from measurement of QoL. Associations of MBI with the novel QFS-5 were similar to associations between...
Ibadat Warring

Prenatal exposure to undernutrition is associated with a specific lipid profile predicting future brain aging

2 months 3 weeks ago
Prenatal adversity affects cognitive and brain aging. Both lipid and leptin concentrations may be involved. We investigated if prenatal undernutrition is associated with a specific blood lipid profile and/or leptin concentrations, and if these relate to cognitive function and brain aging. 801 plasma samples of members of the Dutch famine birth cohort were assessed for lipidomics and leptin at age 58. Cognitive performance was measured with a Stroop task at 58, and MRI-based BrainAGE was derived...
Stuart G Snowden

Utilising an in silico model to predict outcomes in senescence-driven acute liver injury

2 months 3 weeks ago
Currently liver transplantation is the only treatment option for liver disease, but organ availability cannot meet patient demand. Alternative regenerative therapies, including cell transplantation, aim to modulate the injured microenvironment from inflammation and scarring towards regeneration. The complexity of the liver injury response makes it challenging to identify suitable therapeutic targets when relying on experimental approaches alone. Therefore, we adopted a combined in vivo-in silico...
Candice Ashmore-Harris

Therapeutic targeting of senescent cells in the CNS

2 months 3 weeks ago
Senescent cells accumulate throughout the body with advanced age, diseases and chronic conditions. They negatively impact health and function of multiple systems, including the central nervous system (CNS). Therapies that target senescent cells, broadly referred to as senotherapeutics, recently emerged as potentially important treatment strategies for the CNS. Promising therapeutic approaches involve clearing senescent cells by disarming their pro-survival pathways with 'senolytics'; or...
Markus Riessland

A biological age based on common clinical markers predicts health trajectory and mortality risk in dogs

2 months 3 weeks ago
Predicting aging trajectories through biomarkers of biological aging can guide interventions that optimize healthy lifespan in humans and companion animals. Differences in physiology, genetics, nutrition, and lifestyle limit the generalization of such biomarkers and may therefore require species-specific algorithms. Here, we compared correlations of standard clinical blood parameters with survival probability in humans with those of the two most common mammalian companion animals, cats and dogs,...
Sébastien Herzig
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