Aging & Longevity

Sea urchin bioactive compounds: emerging interventions for age-related diseases

1 day ago
Among the marine bioresources, sea urchins are emerging as a promising provider of bioactive compounds with broad therapeutic potentials, including for ageing and age-related diseases. This review highlights the therapeutic promise of sea urchin bioactive compounds, covering evidence from both laboratory and clinical studies. Compounds found in sea urchin such as carotenoids, polyhydroxynaphthoquinones (PHNQs), and flavonoids demonstrate antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties with notable...
Beatriz Escobar-Doncel

Dietary lipid content modifies wah-1/AIFM1-associated phenotypes via LRK-1 and DRP-1 expression in C. elegans

1 day ago
Eukaryotic cells rely on mitochondria to fine-tune their metabolism in response to environmental and nutritional changes. However, how mitochondria adapt to nutrient availability and how diets impact mitochondrial disease progression, remain unclear. Here, we show that lipid-derived diets influence the survival of Caenorhabditis elegans carrying a hypomorphic wah-1/AIFM1 mutation that compromises mitochondrial Complex I assembly. Comparative proteomic and lipidomic analyses reveal that the...
Mrityunjoy Mondal

Oxidized phosphatidylcholines deposition drives chronic neurodegeneration in a mouse model of progressive multiple sclerosis via IL-1β signaling

1 day ago
Oxidized phosphatidylcholines (OxPCs) are neurotoxic byproducts of oxidative stress elevated in the central nervous system (CNS) during progressive multiple sclerosis (P-MS). How OxPCs contribute to the pathophysiology of P-MS is unclear. Here we show that stereotactic OxPC deposition in the CNS of mice induces a chronic compartmentalized lesion with pathological features similar to chronic active lesions found in P-MS. Using this model, we found that although microglia protected the CNS from...
Ruoqi Yu

Intergenerational approach of community dance program for older adults in singapore: a feasibility cluster-controlled trial

1 day ago
CONCLUSION: These preliminary findings suggest potential benefits of the dance intervention for physical and psychosocial well-being among older adults, warranting further evaluation in larger, adequately powered randomized studies. Future research can investigate the pathways of how intergenerational dance intervention may enhance older adults' cognitive, physical, and psychosocial function over a longer term, as well as the relationships among these variables. Hence, more comprehensive and...
Xi Vivien Wu

Prevalence and factors associated with sarcopenia risk among older adults with diabetes: an exploratory network analysis

1 day ago
CONCLUSION: Our findings highlight unhappiness as the key factor in the sarcopenia risk network among older adults with diabetes. The key factors vary across different age and diabetes duration, highlighting the necessity of tailoring intervention strategies to individual patients. Objective support demonstrates a broad impact on sarcopenia risk across this population.
Ni Sang

Different dimensions of smoking behavior and their associations with accelerated composite biomarkers-based biological aging in Chinese older adults

1 day ago
CONCLUSIONS: Different dimensions of smoking show robust and dose-response relationships with composite biomarkers-based BA acceleration. Our findings confirm that there is no safe level of smoking and emphasize the public health significance of achieving small but population-wide shifts in biological age by strengthening tobacco control measures.
Dan Tang

Predictive model development for possible sarcopenia in community-dwelling older adults: a cross-sectional machine learning approach using the Korean frailty and aging cohort study

1 day ago
CONCLUSIONS: Multidomain geriatric indicators including anthropometric status (body mass index), walking aid use, cognitive function, age, and exhaustion can guide pragmatic, community-based screening for possible sarcopenia. Simple, accessible assessments of these predictors may facilitate earlier identification and referral, and should be considered in sarcopenia screening and prevention strategies.
Sooyoung Kwon

Greater Severity of Hearing Loss is Associated with Worse Balance Performance but Exercise may Improve Stability

1 day ago
CONCLUSIONS: Individuals with BHL did not show increased visual or somatosensory reliance and overall as a group showed similar balance performance to adults with normal hearing. Greater severity of hearing loss was associated with worse performance regardless of age. This study supports the role of regular exercise as protective against balance dysfunction in aging with or without hearing loss.
Liraz Arie

Short- and long-term costs of reproduction revealed by telomere dynamics in wild greater horseshoe bats

1 day ago
Life-history trade-offs between reproduction and survival are well documented, yet the biological mechanisms underlying costs remain unclear. Telomere length (TL) is a potential biomarker for such costs, although its association with reproductive efforts is mixed. Bats, particularly the long-lived greater horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus ferrumequinum), provide a rare opportunity to explore these dynamics due to their longevity and low reproductive rates. We examined telomere dynamics in 202 female R....
Megan L Power

Cerebellar Purkinje cell stripe patterns reveal a differential vulnerability and resistance to cell loss during normal aging in mice

1 day ago
Age-related neurodegenerative diseases involve reduced cell numbers and impaired behavioral capacity. Neurodegeneration and behavioral deficits also occur during aging, and notably in the absence of disease. The cerebellum, which modulates movement and cognition, is susceptible to cell loss in both aging and disease. Here, we demonstrate that cerebellar Purkinje cell loss in aged mice is not spatially random but rather occurs in a pattern of parasagittal stripes. We also find that aged mice...
Sarah G Donofrio

Vibration-induced illusion of movement is hindered by acute stroke but mostly by aging: a cross-sectional study

1 day ago
The proprioceptive and visual systems play a major role in daily tasks by providing continuous feedback to the central nervous system (CNS) for coordinating movements. However, it remains unclear to what extent alterations in the proprioceptive system and CNS affect vibration-induced illusion of movement (VIM) with age and after a stroke. To address this, 29 young (26 ± 7 years), 30 older (63 ± 8 years), and 26 stroke participants (68 ± 12 years) with left arm impairment, all right-handed,...
Brieuc Léger

Age-Dependent Metabolomic Signatures of Dietary Restriction in Mice

1 day ago
Caloric (CR) or dietary (DR) restriction improves health and extends lifespan in multiple species. However, the beneficial effects of DR may diminish if introduced late in life, emphasizing the importance of timing for promoting healthspan and avoiding adverse outcomes. Using a metabolomics approach, we investigated the metabolic responses in plasma, liver, and kidney of mice on acute and chronic DR at various ages. Two hundred and five mice including young (2-month-old; n = 72), middle-aged...
Ji-Sue Lee

Quantifying the waning of humoral immunity

3 days ago
Immunological memory is a defining feature of immunity, and a quantitative description of how it wanes would help better understand the processes underlying its maintenance and estimate the duration of protection after immunization. We analyzed the waning of antibodies to a panel of virus and vaccine antigens and found that a power-law model captured both the initial rapid decline and much slower subsequent waning. Importantly, accounting for the time post-immunization at which the waning was...
Ananya Saha

Barriers and motivators of geriatric engagement in digital therapeutics: A narrative review

3 days ago
The adoption of digital therapeutics among older adults presents both opportunities and challenges in modern healthcare. While these technologies enhance disease management, autonomy, and quality of life, engagement remains hindered by cognitive, emotional, systemic, and sociocultural barriers. This narrative review synthesizes findings from 76 peer-reviewed studies identified through Scopus and Web of Science (2010-2024) to examine key factors influencing geriatric engagement with digital...
Azliyana Azizan

Rural-Urban migration of children and the older population: identifying challenges and adaptive strategies in Iran with a qualitative study

3 days ago
BACKGROUND: The phenomenon of population aging and the migration of young people from rural to urban areas, particularly in Iran's rural regions, has led to a higher growth rate of aging populations. This qualitative study aimed to investigate the effects of children's migration on the physical, mental, and social health of older adults in Kerman province and to identify their spontaneous adaptive strategies.
Saideh Garousi

Microglial lipid droplets as therapeutic targets in age-related neurodegenerative diseases

3 days ago
Monoclonal antibodies approved for Alzheimer's disease (AD), such as lecanemab and aducanumab, have been shown to enhance microglial phagocytic function, underscoring the therapeutic relevance of microglia in neurodegenerative diseases (NDDs). Emerging evidence implicates lipid droplets (LDs) in brain aging and NDDs, particularly through LDs-laden microglia known as lipid droplet-accumulating microglia (LDAM), which exhibit impaired phagocytosis, elevated oxidative stress, and dysregulated lipid...
Soyoung Sung

The neural correlates of cognitive training-induced gains in aging: a meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies

3 days ago
Cognitive training is a promising non-pharmacological approach to mitigate age-related cognitive decline, yet the underlying neural mechanisms remain unclear. We conducted a meta-analysis of 24 neuroimaging studies comparing cognitive training with control conditions in older adults. Outcomes included changes in cognitive function and task-related brain activation. Moderator and mediation analyses were conducted to examine the influence of participant characteristics, training parameters, and...
Geng Li

Visual cortical responses in age-related hearing loss show evidence for compensatory neuroplasticity

3 days ago
Sensory loss is prevalent in older adults and is associated with changes to brain structure and function. In early life, the brain compensates for sensory loss by upregulating intact senses, such as in deafness where neural sensitivity for vision increases and visual peripheral perception improves. However, it is unclear if similar neuroplastic compensation occurs in older adults with sensory loss, which would show the aging brain's adaptability and inform sensory rehabilitation strategies. We...
Patricia V Aguiar

Multiparametric profiling of plasma cell-free nucleic acids in nonagenarians and centenarians highlights age-related differences associated with longevity

3 days ago
Plasma circulating cell-free nucleic acids (ccfNAs) have emerged as promising non-invasive biomarkers of aging. While age-associated changes have been reported, data in relation to extreme aging and longevity remain scarce. Here, we assessed ccfNA levels and integrity, and ccfDNA methylation in a cohort of 86 individuals, analyzed both overall and stratified by sex, including nonagenarians (NON: 90-98 years, n = 29), centenarians (CEN: 100-109 years, n = 28), and a middle-aged control group (CG:...
Nicolas P Tessier
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