Aging & Longevity
Genetic associations and mediating effects of insulin resistance between hypertension and sarcopenia: A bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization study
CONCLUSION: The study indicates the causality between hypertension and sarcopenia, potentially mediated by insulin resistance (BMI, insulin, FBG, HbA1c, and TG). It provides crucial evidence for the genetic association between hypertension and sarcopenia, while also offering insights for managing both conditions, particularly in terms of blood glucose, lipid, and weight control.
Physical Fitness Dynamics Shape Immune Remodeling in Healthy Aging: A 3-Year Longitudinal Study
Aging is accompanied by functional decline and immune remodeling, yet the dynamics and early modifiability of these processes remain incompletely understood. Research suggests that lifestyle factors, particularly physical activity and fitness, influence immune aging. This study investigated longitudinal changes in physical performance and immune parameters in a well-characterized cohort of clinically healthy elderly. In this study, 49 clinically healthy elderly underwent repeated assessments of...
The Immune-Autonomic Interface in Aging: Baseline Immune Profile Shapes Cardiac Autonomic Response to Exercise
Aging is characterized by reduced physiological resilience, linked to declines in both cardiac autonomic control (assessed via Heart Rate Variability, HRV) and immune function (immunosenescence, inflammaging). While static immune-autonomic links are known, how baseline immune status dynamically influences autonomic responses to acute stress in aging remains unclear. This study investigated the association between baseline immune cell profiles and dynamic HRV changes during rest, acute exercise,...
"Keep the Human Touch": Exploring Perspectives of Older Adults on the Use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Healthcare
No abstract
The natural flavonoid dihydromyricetin targets senescent cells via PRDX2 and alleviates age-related diseases
Aging is a primary risk factor for chronic diseases, with cellular senescence as an effective target to delay, prevent or alleviate age-related disorders. Here we report in vitro screening outputs from a natural medicinal agent library, wherein dihydromyricetin, a natural flavonoid, showed senotherapeutic potential. Dihydromyricetin protects senescent fibroblasts against further DNA damage and attenuates the senescence-associated secretory phenotype, acting as a senomorphic agent. Proteomics...
Multi-electron nitrobenzothiadiazole sp-conjugated-alkynyl covalent organic frameworks for ammonium-ion batteries
Covalent organic frameworks containing periodic redox-active motifs and conjugation structures are booming as competitive negative electrodes for ammonium-ion batteries. Introducing substantial single-electron active motifs linked by dynamic imine bonds can increase their capacity; however, this design is constrained by suboptimal single-electron redox efficiency and insufficient linkage stability. Here we unlock a multiple two-electron-transfer nitrobenzothiadiazole covalent organic framework...
Dietary restriction in aging and longevity
Different types of dietary restriction (DR) have been practiced by humans for religious and medical purposes for millennia, but only during the past three decades has the scientific study of DR at cellular and molecular levels proliferated. Here we review the evidence testing a variety of DR paradigms in the context of aging, focusing on mammalian findings. We discuss potential DR mimetics that modulate autophagy, FGF21, AMPK, mTORC1, NAD^(+) metabolism, SIRTs, GLP-1R and other pathways as well...
A glycolytic metabolite puts the brakes on cGAS-driven aging
No abstract
The glycolytic metabolite phosphoenolpyruvate restricts cGAS-driven inflammation to promote healthy aging
Aging involves multiple detrimental changes in the systemic milieu, leading to functional deterioration and age-related diseases. However, the potential self-protective adaptive alterations during aging remain underexplored. Here we show that phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), a glycolytic metabolite, acts as a protective factor against age-related chronic inflammation. Longitudinal analyses in mice and humans reveal a biphasic PEP trajectory, characterized by initial accumulation followed by...
Progressive mural cell deficiencies across the lifespan in a foxf2 model of cerebral small vessel disease
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is a leading cause of stroke and dementia and yet is often an incidental finding in aged patients due to the inaccessibility of brain vasculature to imaging. Animal models are important for modelling the development and progression of SVD across the lifespan. In humans, reduced FOXF2 is associated with an increased stroke risk and SVD prevalence in humans. In the zebrafish, foxf2 is expressed in pericytes and vascular smooth muscle cells and is involved in...
Socio-economic position and healthy ageing across the life course: a systematic review of longitudinal studies
Increasing health inequalities among older adults globally illustrate the urgent need for effective interventions. Socio-economic position (SEP), which reflects an individual's social and economic standing, may affect healthy ageing through various life course mechanisms. However, longitudinal associations between life course SEP and healthy ageing as a multidimensional construct remain unclear. We conducted a comprehensive systematic review of longitudinal studies investigating the associations...
Modifiable risk factors associated with increased retinal age gap in an Australian population
Retinal age gap (RAG)-the difference between retina-predicted age and chronological age-indicates biological ageing that has been linked to the risk of mortality and chronic disease. We aimed to identify risk factors associated with higher RAG in an Australian population. This cross-sectional study included 5107 participants from the Busselton Healthy Ageing Study (BHAS), a Western Australian community-based cohort. Retinal age was estimated using a validated deep-learning model applied to...
MS4A4A and MS4A6A: New targets to enhance microglia protective function in Alzheimer's disease
MS4A4A and MS4A6A are microglia-expressed genes linked to Alzheimer's disease risk. In this issue of Neuron, Rosner et al.¹ show that these proteins cooperatively restrain TREM2 signaling, dampening protective microglial responses and highlighting MS4A inhibition as a potential strategy to rejuvenate the brain's innate immune system in Alzheimer's disease.
Restoring circadian rhythms in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus reverses aging biomarkers and extends lifespan in male mice
Age-related circadian disruptions accelerate physiological decline and shorten lifespan. Enhancing circadian amplitude has emerged as a promising strategy for ameliorating age-associated disorders. Here, we show that the circadian-phase-optimized administration of 3'-deoxyadenosine (3dA) strengthens circadian amplitude in hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) neurons, mitigates aging biomarkers, and extends mouse lifespan. 3dA restores clock synchrony and hormonal rhythms, including...
Sleep deterioration as a systems-level readout of aging biology: integrating metabolic, inflammatory and circadian mechanisms
Sleep architecture and continuity deteriorate markedly with aging, yet these changes are frequently approached as isolated sleep disorders rather than as manifestations of systemic biological dysregulation. Accumulating evidence indicates that age-related sleep fragmentation reflects the progressive disruption of interconnected metabolic, inflammatory and circadian networks that are central to the biology of aging. In this context, sleep can be more accurately interpreted as a functional readout...
Resistance training for the prevention and management of sarcopenia in older adults: Mechanisms, efficacy, and future applications
Sarcopenia is a major health concern in aging populations. Resistance training (RT) is widely recommended to improve muscle mass, strength, and physical function in older adults. In recent years, research on both biological mechanisms and clinical effects of RT has increased. However, these two fields have largely progressed in parallel, with limited evidence linking biological mechanisms to clinical efficacy. This narrative review integrates preclinical and clinical mechanistic evidence on RT...
In Search of Geriatrician Identity
Geriatricians have struggled to describe a complex and sometimes ambiguous professional identity. Unlike other medical specialties anchored in discrete organ systems, diagnostic and interventional technologies, or clearly defined clinical settings, geriatric medicine encompasses the care of a heterogeneous population of older adults with widely varying clinical needs, priorities, and trajectories relevant to function, multimorbidity, and complexity. This Special Article examines four distinct...
Clusters of vascular aging manifestations predict incident cardiovascular events in the community
Vascular aging is the accumulation of functional and structural changes of vessels throughout life. While earlier studies have shown that single manifestation of vascular aging is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), it is unknown how the different manifestations of vascular aging cluster at the individual level, and whether individuals with different vascular aging patterns have different risk of progression to overt CVD. Here, we identify three patterns of...
Early mitophagy activation by Urolithin A prevents, but late activation does not reverse, age-related cognitive impairment
The hippocampus is crucial to learning and memory, functions that decline with age due to impaired mitochondrial bioenergetics and reduced mitophagy, resulting in the accumulation of dysfunctional mitochondria and increased susceptibility to neurodegeneration. Urolithin A (UA), a natural mitophagy activator derived from polyphenols, has demonstrated benefits in Alzheimer's disease models; however, its role in normal aging remains unclear. Here, we investigated whether UA can prevent or reverse...
BRIDGE - Behavioral and physical activation for multimorbid older adults with depressive symptoms during the inpatient to outpatient transition: Study protocol for a multicenter two-arm randomized controlled trial
No abstract
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