Aging & Longevity
Exogenous mitochondrial transplantation attenuates oxidative stress-driven retinal degeneration in a sodium iodate - induced mouse model
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a degenerative retinal disease initiated by dysfunction of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), in which age-related mitochondrial impairment, oxidative stress, chronic inflammation, and complement activation collectively drive outer retinal dysfunction and RPE atrophy, ultimately leading to progressive central vision loss. Accumulating evidence indicates that mitochondrial abnormalities, including excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS) production,...
Systemic infections alter cortical transcriptional signatures in Alzheimer's disease
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by neuroinflammation, yet the impact of concurrent systemic infections on the AD brain remains poorly understood. We investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying the central nervous system response to systemic infections in AD by analyzing RNA sequencing data generated in the prefrontal cortex from 202 post-mortem donors (113 AD, 89 controls), where we stratified by the presence of a respiratory infection at the time of death. We identified 763...
Epigenetic aging is associated with hearing loss and multi-system disease risk independently of chronological age
CONCLUSION: Based on our data, GrimAgeAcc is associated with ARHL and systemic age-related diseases (dementia, CVD, diabetes), potentially through shared biological pathways (e.g., endocytosis, lysosomal, inflammatory). Chronological age explains 28-50% of these associations, yet ARHL remains independently associated with all three outcomes after age adjustment. The cochlea may be vulnerable, but causal evidence is lacking. All findings are hypothesis-generating and require experimental...
The Autophagy-Senescence-Inflammasome Axis: A Novel Triad in Neurodegenerative Diseases?
Chronic neuroinflammation is a defining feature of brain ageing and neurodegenerative disorders, yet the molecular mechanisms responsible for its persistence remain incompletely understood. Although autophagy dysfunction, glial senescence, and inflammasome activation are well-established contributors to progressive neurodegeneration, these processes are often analysed independently or through pairwise interactions, leaving their collective contribution to persistent neuroinflammation and disease...
Gut microbiota associates with frailty in older women
Frailty is a multifactorial geriatric condition linked to increased mortality and adverse health outcomes and is associated with gut microbiome features that differ from those observed in healthy ageing. We analyze gut metagenomic profiles in relation to estimated frailty severity and frailty-related clinical outcomes assessed with an internally developed and validated Frailty Mortality Index (FMI) in the SUPERB cohort, comprising 2,081 Swedish women aged 75-80 years. The FMI is a composite...
Reproductive behaviors, genetic susceptibility and accelerated aging risk
We examined the associations of reproductive behaviors and genetic susceptibility with aging indicators among female participants in the UK Biobank. Reproductive behaviors included the number of children ever born (NEB), age at first birth (AFB), age at last birth (ALB), and span of years of births (SYB). Aging indicators included frailty, PhenoAge acceleration, KDM-BA acceleration, and brain age difference (BrainAGE-diff). In multivariable analyses, reproductive behaviors showed nonlinear...
Local autophagy impairment triggers brain-wide presynaptic remodeling and resilience
Neural circuits must remain functionally stable while adapting to changing demands and levels of stress. While this balance is thought to rely on plasticity programs integrating molecular and activity-dependent signals, mechanistic models of how such adaptations are orchestrated remain limited. Here, we show that impairment of autophagy in the Drosophila mushroom body (MB) induces brain-wide, post-transcriptional remodeling of presynaptic active zones, characterized by increased expression...
Hypoxia rescues complex 1-associated disease caused by proteostatic defects
Impaired mitochondrial proteostasis underlies a broad spectrum of diseases, yet effective therapies remain limited. Here we show that deficiency of HTRA2, a mitochondrial intermembrane space protease, can be rescued by hypoxia therapy. Using an Htra2 mutant mouse model that displays severe neurodegeneration and early lethality, we find that continuous hypoxia rescues striatal degeneration and extends lifespan. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that HTRA2 forms a functional complex with the...
Time-resolved proteolipidomics of the human aorta identifies stage-specific lipid-protein modules across development and aging
An established vascular network is a prerequisite to ensuring an optimal supply of oxygen and nutrients for sustaining developmental events and systemic function. Herein, we construct a time-resolved proteolipidomic atlas of the aorta across the human life cycle. trans-omics integration reveals that postnatal ganglioside GM3 accumulation is functionally coregulated with calcium homeostasis mediated by plasma membrane calcium-transporting ATPases (PMCAs). We then verify mechanistically in...
Inhibition of elastin degradation alleviates joint degeneration in aging mice, dogs, and human models
Extracellular matrix degradation is a fundamental pathological feature of osteoarthritis, while the roles of degraded matrix remain largely unknown. We previously showed that serum elastin fragments were a systemic aging driver. Here, we found that elastin fragments were upregulated in synovial fluid in dual-center osteoarthritis patients. Elastin fragments actively impaired joint tissue in mice and human explants. Mechanistically, a specific elastin motif containing...
Dopamine-driven mitochondrial reverse electron transport in immune cells mediates gut-brain ROS signaling during sleep deprivation
Sleep deprivation (SD), together with inevitable stress inherent to conventional SD protocols, can induce oxidative stress and inflammation, thereby increasing the risk of premature death. However, the source and signaling pathways underlying reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that both mechanical and thermogenetic SD, along with possible stress induced by both protocols, lead to initial ROS accumulation in Drosophila gut subregions, including the...
Mineralized carbonates contribute to the millennial durability of Roman concrete
Roman concrete structures have remained serviceable for nearly two millennia and are widely regarded as outstanding examples of durable ancient engineering. Existing literature attributes Roman concrete longevity to the pozzolanic reaction that occurs between reactive volcanic ashes and lime. While the pozzolanic reaction is of fundamental importance, we argue that carbonation over a long period of time also substantially enhances the durability and potential self-healing properties of concrete....
Targeting cellular senescence in dermatology: senolytic and senomorphic strategies
Cellular senescence has emerged as a central mechanism driving cutaneous aging, impaired regeneration, and numerous dermatologic pathologies. Initially evolved as a protective mechanism to prevent malignant transformation and facilitate wound repair, senescence becomes maladaptive when senescent cells persist. Senescent keratinocytes, fibroblasts, and melanocytes can secrete pro-inflammatory mediators and other factors, collectively termed the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP),...
Long-lived mammals contain more phosphorylation sites in the SIRT6 C-terminus that enhance PARP1 interaction and resistance to oxidative stress
Sirtuin 6 (SIRT6) is a protein deacetylase and ribosyltransferase that is a vital hub for maintaining epigenetic homeostasis, regulating the transcriptome, and repairing DNA double stranded breaks (DSBs). Comprehensive proteomic profiling of the SIRT6 posttranslational landscape, however, remains elusive. The SIRT6 C-terminal domain contains multiple phosphorylation sites. We find that the presence and the use of these sites are strongly correlated with maximum lifespan across mammals....
Depressive symptoms and multiple markers of brain aging in community-dwelling older adults
Late-life depressive symptoms have been associated with structural brain changes and cognitive impairment, but prior studies have typically examined individual markers of brain aging in isolation. This study examined the associations between depressive symptoms and multiple markers of brain aging in a population-based cohort of community-dwelling older adults. Baseline data from 2,746 participants with complete data on depressive symptoms, neuroimaging measures, cognitive assessment, and...
Klotho deficiency and cognitive impairment in dialysis patients: mechanisms, clinical evidence, and therapeutic implications
Cognitive impairment is highly prevalent among patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), particularly those undergoing dialysis, and is associated with poor clinical outcomes and reduced quality of life. Emerging evidence suggests that Klotho, an anti-aging protein predominantly expressed in the kidney, plays a critical role in the pathophysiology of uremia-related cognitive dysfunction. This review summarizes current clinical and experimental evidence regarding Klotho deficiency in dialysis...
FGF21 connects ER stress to sulfide signaling to enhance cellular resilience
Fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) is a stress-induced endocrine hormone that regulates metabolism. Grandl et al. show that FGF21, through its receptor β-klotho (KLB), enhances sulfide signaling and hydrogen sulfide production, strengthening the unfolded protein response and integrated stress response to promote stress resilience, metabolic adaptation, and potentially healthy aging.
Core gastric microbiota linked to pathogenesis and preserved across age-stratified cohorts
The stomach harbors a complex microbial niche, yet the persistence and disease relevance of its core microbiota remain unclear. Using full-length 16S and ITS sequencing of 255 pediatric samples, this study identifies 11 core bacterial genera organized into two antagonistic communities, CST1A and CST1B. CST1A is enriched in non-ulcer controls, whereas CST1B is associated with gastroduodenal disease, with limited fungal involvement. Stratified analyses show that Helicobacter pylori infection...
Brain health across the lifespan and the impact of nutrition, exercise, microbiota, and sleep
Dietary strategies that support long-term cognitive health and resilience against neurodegenerative diseases are important with aging and senescence. Brain aging is a consequence of intricate biological changes that occur over the lifespan. The process of aging involves the decline in metabolic and physiologic functions, and changes in anatomical structure. However, our lifestyle practices, including diets and nutrient intakes, physical exercise, sleep quality, and cognitive activity can help to...
AI-Driven Advances in Vascular Aging Research: From Mechanisms to Precision Medicine
Vascular aging is a fundamental contributor to the development of chronic diseases and has emerged as a critical focus in biomedical research. With the rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI), new opportunities have arisen to enhance the precision and efficiency of vascular aging studies. AI techniques, particularly those applied to large-scale multi-omics and medical imaging data, enable the identification of novel biomarkers and the development of robust models to quantify the rate...
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