Aging & Longevity
Both genome instability and replicative senescence stem from the shortest telomere in telomerase-negative cells
In the absence of telomerase, telomere shortening triggers replicative senescence, a tumor suppressor mechanism that is also associated with oncogenic genomic instability. Yet, the precise mechanism that connects these seemingly opposing forces remains poorly understood. To directly study the complex interplay between senescence, telomere dynamics, and genomic instability, we develop a system in Saccharomyces cerevisiae to generate and track telomeres of precise length in the absence of...
Exploratory analysis of the associations of the brain age gap with cognitive function and amyloid-β accumulation: participants selection based on metabolic and physiological blood markers
The brain age gap (BAG) is defined as the difference between brain age estimated from MRI using artificial intelligence and chronological age, and has been proposed as a biomarker reflecting aging and neurodegeneration. However, the association between BAG and dementia-related biomarkers has yielded inconsistent findings in previous studies. Conventional training datasets have primarily been defined based on medical history and MRI findings, which may have included participants with underlying...
Effects of Dance Interventions on Physical Function in Healthy Older Adults: A Systematic Review and 3-Level Meta-Analysis
CONCLUSIONS: Dance serves as an effective nonpharmacological strategy for promoting healthy aging. Based on current evidence, public health policymakers should prioritize resource allocation toward the 70- to 75-year-old community-dwelling population. Regarding dance prescription design, we advocate for an 8-week baseline cycle to generate significant benefits and highlight the potential value of short-duration models (∼20 minutes) in enhancing adherence and improving function. However, given...
Regulation of Lipid Dysmetabolism and Neuroinflammation Progression Linked With Alzheimer's Disease Through Modulation of Dgat2
Alzheimer's disease (AD), an age-associated neurodegenerative disorder, is characterized by progressive cognitive decline, amyloid-β (Aβ) accumulation (including soluble oligomers and deposited aggregates), lipid dysregulation, and neuroinflammation. Although mutations in the amyloid precursor protein (APP) and accumulation of Aβ42 are established drivers of pathology, the mechanisms connecting oligomeric amyloid toxicity with lipid metabolism and inflammatory responses remain poorly understood....
Single-nucleus multiome analysis in the human prefrontal cortex identifies gene expression and cis-regulatory elements associated with aging
Aging is an unavoidable part of life, but gaps still remain in the understanding of age-associated molecular changes within the brain. We generated single-nucleus multiome ATAC plus gene expression profiles in 357 human brain samples from European and African admixed ancestry individuals ranging from 15 to 100 years old. The final dataset consisted of paired transcriptomic and epigenomic profiles for over 1.5 million cells. These were classified into seven major cell types using canonical marker...
Biological traits predict species' time-varying responses to multiple global change drivers
Multiple drivers of global change are causing rapid biodiversity loss worldwide. However, predicting species' trajectories remains challenging due to the dynamic and state-dependent nature of ecological responses in real-world ecosystems. Here, we leverage nonlinear time series analysis of a multi-decadal, high-resolution dataset encompassing climate, freshwater, and sediment variables, alongside estuarine macroinvertebrate abundance. Our analysis shows that key biological traits, including body...
Human FUS is toxic via association with RNA polymerase II in Drosophila
The RNA-binding protein FUS is commonly mutated in familial cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS-FUS), where it forms cytoplasmic inclusions. In addition, non-mutated FUS is a constituent component of protein inclusions in approximately 5-10% of cases of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). Overexpression of wild-type human FUS is toxic to Drosophila neurons, preventing normal development and shortening lifespan in adults. In this study, we demonstrated that removal of the nuclear...
Noncanonical role of MTP-18 in mitochondrial function and aging via electron transport chain interactions in Caenorhabditis elegans
Mitochondria provide energy and maintain homeostasis, and their dysfunction relates to aging. Disrupted structure and function of mitochondria are linked to age-related diseases, but the roles of many mitochondrial proteins in mitochondrial dynamics and aging remain unclear. We studied the role of the mitochondrial fission protein MTP-18 in mitochondrial dynamics and aging in C. elegans. Our data show that loss of mtp-18 increases longevity and stress resistance, alongside changes in key...
Sex dimorphism in the cardiovascular responses to d-galactose-induced accelerated aging: effects of HO-1 modulation
Chronic d-galactose (d-gal) injection is an experimental model of accelerated aging in rodents. However, the cardiovascular phenotypes of this model have been poorly characterized, especially as they relate to sex differences. The goal of this study was to investigate the cardiovascular effects of chronic d-gal injection in male and female C57BL/6 mice and the impact of HO-1 induction or inhibition in this model. Forty-eight 8-week-old male and female C57BL/6 mice were divided randomly into four...
Fish consumption and cognitive function in aging: a systematic review of observational studies
Epidemiological studies consistently link higher fish intake with slower rates of cognitive decline and lower dementia incidence. The aim of the present study was to systematically review existing observational studies investigating the association between fish consumption and cognitive function in older adults. A total of 25 studies (8 cross-sectional and 17 prospective including mainly healthy older adults, age range of participants ranging from 18 to 30 years at baseline in prospective...
Trajectories of cognitive ability and attitudes toward own aging in older adults: a conditional parallel latent growth model
No abstract
TgFbox1-TgNAC2-TgWIN1 module regulates petal senescence by fine-tuning cuticular wax biosynthesis in tulip
Flower aging, or senescence, is generally accompanied by petal dehydration/wilting. The cuticle functions as a barrier to withhold water for plant organs. However, little is known about how the cuticle modifies the process of petal development. Here, we report that cuticular wax is dynamically changed during petal senescence and wax coverage on petals is coordinated with the expression of TgWIN1. Functional identification indicates that TgWIN1 positively regulates wax accumulation and delays...
Large-scale metaproteomics of human gut microbiota reveals microbial functions in metabolic diseases and aging
The protein-level functionalities of the human gut microbiota in large populations, and their associations with host factors, remain unexplored. This study reports a metaproteomic study of 1,967 fecal samples from 1,399 middle-aged and elderly Chinese individuals, identifying microbial functions linked to 44 phenotypes. We uncover aging-associated functional shifts in carbon metabolism and energy production driven by species within the Bacillota, Bacteroidota, Actinomycetota, and Pseudomonadota....
Lactate-Lactylation Axis as an Emerging Metabolic-Epigenetic Pathway in Diabetic Microvascular Complications
Lactate, once viewed merely as a glycolytic byproduct, is now recognized as a key signaling molecule and epigenetic regulator through the recently identified post-translational modification known as lactylation. In diabetic microvascular complications, including diabetic retinopathy (DR), diabetic kidney disease (DKD), and diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN), persistent hyperglycemia promotes metabolic reprogramming toward glycolysis and leads to excessive lactate production. This sustained...
Multifunctionality of TIM-3: from immunological aging to pathological progression
The connection between aging and immune dysfunction is uncovering how immunoaging processes contribute to disease. Recent data from Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and adult and pediatric glioblastomas reveal a novel role for TIM3 in brain immune alteration. These findings highlight the role of TIM3 in promoting myeloid cell dysfunction toward an immunosuppressive profile. TIM3-blocking antibody treatments for central nervous system pathologies could be a new therapeutic window for...
Butyrate extends health and lifespan in mice with mitochondrial deficiency
Mitochondrial diseases progressively lead to multisystemic failure with treatment options remaining extremely limited. Here, to investigate strategies that alleviate mitochondrial dysfunction, we first generate a ubiquitous and tamoxifen-inducible knockout mouse model of mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM), a nuclear-encoded protein involved in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) maintenance - Tfam^(fl/fl)Ubc^(Cre-ERT2) (iTfamKO) mice. Systemic TFAM deficiency triggers mitochondrial decline in a...
DeepStrataAge: an interpretable deep-learning clock that reveals stage- and sex-divergent DNA methylation aging dynamics
Aging is the strongest risk factor for chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer's, and cancer. DNA methylation (DNAm) clocks offer a promising measure of biological age, but most rely on linear models that miss non-linear dynamics and CpG interactions. To address this, we developed a deep neural network (DNN)-based DNAm clock trained on 29,167 samples profiled on Illumina EPIC v1.0 and v2.0 arrays. Using 12,234 CpGs selected through sex- and age-stratified correlations, our...
Urbanization, environment, and inflammaging: insights from sub-Saharan Africa
Emerging evidence shows that inflammaging varies across populations, challenging universal immune-aging models. Urbanization in sub-Saharan Africa-characterized by reduced exposure to infectious diseases and rising rates of noncommunicable diseases-offers a natural experiment for assessing environmental effects on inflammaging. Lower inflammaging in indigenous groups may reflect adaptation to chronic infection, whereas heightened inflammation in industrialized populations suggests ecological...
Longitudinal changes in epigenetic clocks predict survival in the InCHIANTI cohort
Epigenetic clocks derived from DNA methylation patterns are among the most promising biomarkers of biological aging^(1-7), as they capture molecular signatures that predict morbidity and mortality beyond chronological age. Although cross-sectional assessments of epigenetic age have been linked consistently to health outcomes and lifespan, it remains unclear whether the rate of change in these clocks over time provides additional insight into aging trajectories. In this longitudinal study of 699...
Sustainable nutrition and mental health in older adults: the interplay of DASH diet quality, sustainable consumption behavior, cognitive function, and depression
CONCLUSIONS: The study highlighted the beneficial role of DASH diet adherence and sustainable nutritional practices in mitigating depressive symptoms and supporting cognitive function in older adults. These dietary patterns could represent crucial components of preventive strategies for healthy aging. Further longitudinal research using objective dietary assessments is needed to clarify causal relationships.
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