Aging & Longevity
Addressing the Aging Workforce Crisis Through Intergenerational Programming: A Retrospective Analysis of Perfect Pair
CONCLUSION: Perfect Pair encourages and prepares college students to pursue a career in aging and engages them in issues associated with aging. This has strong implications for future intergenerational programming that aims to promote workforce development in the aging space.
Lactucopicrin promotes the autophagic degradation of MAP2K4/MKK4 by mediating CCDC50 palmitoylation to alleviate osteoarthritis progression
Macroautophagy/autophagy plays a crucial role in maintaining cellular homeostasis and protecting against osteoarthritis (OA). Its dysregulation contributes to OA progression by promoting chondrocyte senescence, inflammation, and cartilage degradation. Enhancing autophagic activity thus represents a promising therapeutic strategy for OA. In this study, we identified lactucopicrin (LCP) as an effective autophagy activator that alleviates OA progression in a mouse model induced by the...
Follicle-stimulating hormone linked to cognitive decline and amyloid burden in postmenopausal women
INTRODUCTION: Women have a higher risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD) than men, with hormonal changes during menopause being a potential factor. However, the exact relationship between these hormonal changes, cognitive function, and AD pathology is not fully understood. This study investigates the differential associations between serum follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and estradiol levels with cognitive function and cerebral amyloid-βeta (Aβ) deposition, quantified using amyloid...
Impact of the 2015 Dutch Long-Term Care Reform on Nursing Home Use and Access for People With Dementia
CONCLUSION: Among older Dutch people with dementia, the 2015 Dutch LTC reform was associated with fewer NH admissions and longer waiting lists. While stabilization of the NH admissions may reflect prioritization of persons with dementia within stricter eligibility criteria, the concurrent rise in waiting list prevalence suggests that institutional capacity did not keep pace with persistent need. As a result, many older people with dementia remain longer in the community, raising concerns...
Concurrent associations between visit-to-visit changes in actigraphy-based physical activity and cognitive aging in older adults
Physical activity (PA) is associated with lower dementia risk, yet few studies examine objectively measured PA with concurrently measured brain and cognitive aging outcomes longitudinally, leaving a gap in knowledge regarding temporality of these brain-behavior associations. We examined how longitudinal within-person changes in average daily step count track with changes in memory, executive function, hippocampal volumes, white matter hyperintensities (WMH), and depressive symptoms over time....
Longitudinal body mass index exposure-based threshold to prevent mortality for populations with type 2 diabetes mellitus
The long-term body mass index (BMI) threshold to prevent mortality among aging individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) remains unclear. We quantify BMI exposure using two metrics: the percentage of time BMI above target range (TAR) and the percentage of time BMI within target range (TTR). In a cohort of 3,708 adults aged ≥40 years with T2DM and at least 5 BMI measurements across 4 years, 1,020 deaths occurred during a median 5-year follow-up. Sustained BMI ≥27 kg/m² (TAR) is positively...
Evaluating Senescence-Targeted Approaches in Alzheimer's Disease: What We Know and What Lies Ahead
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive and irreversible neurodegenerative disease, which represents the most prevalent dementia worldwide. Although amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau pathology have been the classic focus of treatment, accumulating evidence indicates that ageing-associated cellular senescence plays a central role in AD pathogenesis. Senescent neurons, astrocytes, microglia and endothelial cells accumulate in the ageing and Alzheimer's brain and adopt a senescence-associated secretory...
Corrigendum to "Inhibitor PF-04691502 works as a senolytic to regulate cellular senescence" [Exp. Gerontol. 186 (2024) 112359]
No abstract
Divergent aging of nulliparous and parous mammary glands reveals IL33+ hybrid epithelial cells
Aging increases breast cancer risk while an early first pregnancy reduces a woman's life-long risk. Several studies have explored the effect of either aging or pregnancy on mammary stem/progenitor cells, however, the combined effect of both remains unclear. Here, we interrogate the functional and transcriptomic changes at single-cell resolution in the mammary gland of aged nulliparous and parous mice to discover that pregnancy normalizes age-related imbalances in lineage composition, while also...
PURE-seq integrates FACS and PIP-seq for single-cell genomics of ultra-rare cells
Single-cell transcriptomics is valuable for uncovering individual cell properties, particularly in heterogeneous systems. However, this technique often results in the reanalysis of many well-characterized cells, increasing costs and diluting rare cell populations. To address this, we develop PIP-seq for Rare-cell Enrichment and Sequencing (PURE-seq). PURE-seq allows direct FACS sorting of cells into PIP-seq reactions, minimizing handling and reducing cell loss. PURE-seq reliably sequences...
Common variation in meiosis genes shapes human recombination and aneuploidy
The leading cause of human pregnancy loss is aneuploidy, often tracing to errors in chromosome segregation during female meiosis^(1,2). Although abnormal crossover recombination is known to confer risk for aneuploidy^(3,4), limited data have hindered understanding of the potential shared genetic basis of these key molecular phenotypes. To address this gap, we performed retrospective analysis of pre-implantation genetic testing data from 139,416 in vitro fertilized embryos from 22,850 sets of...
Ageing promotes microglial accumulation of slow-degrading synaptic proteins
Neurodegenerative diseases affect 1 in 12 people globally and remain incurable. Central to their pathogenesis is a loss of neuronal protein maintenance and the accumulation of protein aggregates with ageing^(1,2). Here we engineered bioorthogonal tools³ that enabled us to tag the nascent neuronal proteome and study its turnover with ageing, its propensity to aggregate and its interaction with microglia. We show that neuronal protein half-life approximately doubles on average between 4-month-old...
Past, present and future perspectives on the science of aging
No abstract
Nature Aging coming of age
No abstract
The making of Nature Aging, a conversation between the journal staff
No abstract
Blood Cell Mitochondrial Respiration Increases With Age and Varies by Sex in Healthy Adults
Mitochondrial dysfunction is recognized as a biological hallmark of aging; however, bioenergetic capacity across the healthy human life course remains insufficiently characterized. While aging is generally associated with a systemic decline in mitochondrial function ("age-related bioenergetic decline"), recent research suggests that age-related bioenergetic differences are context dependent. Blood cells are extensively utilized as accessible samples for human bioenergetic profiling; therefore,...
Sleep duration trajectories and cognitive impairment among elderly: a 13-year cohort study in China
CONCLUSION: Different sleep duration trajectories are associated with the risk of cognitive impairment, indicating that monitoring dynamic changes in sleep patterns may provide early warning value for cognitive health in the elderly.
Clinical profile of geriatric outpatients managed by physiotherapists in a tertiary hospital in Southwest Nigeria
CONCLUSION: The findings revealed that cerebrovascular accidents, knee osteoarthritis, and lumbar spondylosis are key contributors to disability in geriatric outpatients. Addressing these conditions can help tailor physiotherapy to improve older adults' functional independence and quality of life.
Acute effects of cluster vs. traditional sets on performance and perceptual responses during upper- and lower-limb power-oriented resistance exercises in older adults
CONCLUSION: CS maintained better exercise performance in older adults, accompanied by perception that they could perform more repetitions compared to TRAD. However, the CS implemented did not significantly reduce perceived exertion.
Aging Reshapes gamma/delta T-Cell Immunity Through a Type I Interferon-Foxo1 Axis
Aging is associated with profound alterations in immune cell composition and function, yet the impact on peripheral γ/δ T-cell subsets remains incompletely understood. Here, we show that the peripheral γ/δ T-cell compartment is markedly remodeled with age in mice. Specifically, innate-like Ly-6C^(-) CD44^(hi) γ/δ T cells expand in secondary lymphoid organs (SLOs) of aged mice, while adaptive-like subsets decline. This age-related shift is accompanied by enhanced functionality, with Ly-6C^(-)...
Aging and Longevity: Latest results from PubMed
Subscribe to Aging & Longevity feed