Aging & Longevity
Long-Term Care as a Global Challenge: The Role of the World Health Organization
Long-term care is today one of the most pressing issues in public policy. Its relevance is increasing everywhere but mostly, due to population aging, in low- and middle-income countries. Despite the advances in the past decades regarding the implementation of long-term care systems in several countries, the COVID-19 pandemic showed their fragility and called to rethink long-term care around the world. Issues like quality, workforce shortages, and financial sustainability are key in countries...
Harmonization of late-life participation in cognitively stimulating activities across four cohort studies of cognitive aging
CONCLUSION: We statistically harmonized survey data measuring frequency of participation in cognitive activities across four studies of aging and subsequently validated the harmonized latent trait by linking it to ADRD outcomes. Findings demonstrate the utility of combining self-reported psychosocial survey data collected across multiple studies to thoroughly evaluate the impact of modifiable risk factors on later-life cognitive outcomes in heterogeneous populations.
Mitochondrial double-stranded RNA drives aging-associated cognitive decline
Aging is the primary cause of cognitive decline. Despite extensive study, the molecular mechanisms driving aging-associated cognitive decline remain unclear. Here, we describe a proteostasis-independent function of SEC61A1 and its involvement in aging-associated cognitive decline. SEC61A1 regulates ER-mitochondria contact sites, affecting mitochondrial DNA and RNA synthesis and subsequently leading to changes in innate immune signaling mediated by mitochondrial double-stranded RNA (mt-dsRNA)....
Subtype-specific sirtuin expression signatures link mitochondrial-epigenetic networks to breast cancer survival
Sirtuins (SIRT1-SIRT7) are NAD⁺-dependent regulators of mitochondrial metabolism, chromatin remodeling, and stress resilience pathways-processes that are central to both aging biology and breast cancer (BC) heterogeneity. We systematically evaluated their prognostic and transcriptional patterns across molecular subtypes of BC. We constructed an integrated BC dataset comprising gene expression and survival data containing tumors from 55 datasets. Prognostic associations with recurrence-free...
Breaking the Bonds of Aging: The Underappreciated Roles of Aberrant Cysteine Crosslinks and Protective Thiol Interventions
Aging is a complex process characterized by the accumulation of molecular damage that leads to cellular dysfunction and tissue deterioration. Among the various types of contributing molecular damage, aberrant protein crosslinks are recognized as a key contributor to age-related pathologies. Crosslinks occurring at lysine and arginine residues, such as advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) and carbamylation, have attracted considerable attention of the aging research community. In contrast, the...
Gender-related facilitators and barriers to participation in research on aging using fuzzy cognitive mapping
In the context of cognitive neuroscience research on aging, older women are often overrepresented in observational research, whereas men are overrepresented in clinical trials. Factors underlying the selection bias between and across genders in research on aging are currently poorly understood. Addressing this knowledge gap is critical to provide guidance on how we might mitigate selection bias and improve the generalizability, robustness, and reproducibility of our findings. We aimed to...
Adiponectin and Aging: Mechanistic Insights, Clinical Paradox, and Therapeutic Horizons
Adiponectin is an adipose tissue-derived peptide hormone that exerts beneficial metabolic effects in many tissues throughout the body. It is most well-known for its ability to enhance insulin sensitivity and dampen chronic inflammation. The impact of age on adiponectin is controversial; levels of adiponectin in circulation in older individuals have been linked to both positive and negative effects. This review integrates genetic, mechanistic, and therapeutic perspectives on adiponectin in aging....
Blood-based epigenetic instability linked to human aging and disease
The abundance, dynamics, and context-dependent heterogeneity of DNA methylation, where a pattern considered abnormal in one cell type may be normal in another, complicate the identification of early methylation changes that drive or signal disease development. This complexity can obscure early markers of increased disease risk, making it challenging to detect and intervene in disease processes at their inception. Here, we report 31,744 CpG loci exhibiting highly consistent methylation profiles...
MicroRNA profiles in plasma-derived extracellular vesicles across the human lifespan
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are key mediators of intercellular communication and may reflect physiological changes during aging. We analyzed plasma-derived EVs from a healthy aging cohort stratified by age, using size exclusion chromatography, surface profiling, nanoparticle tracking, and small RNA sequencing. While EV size and concentration remained largely unchanged, older individuals showed shifts in EV immunophenotype consistent with immunosenescence and displayed distinct miRNA signatures...
Perturbation-based balance training on treadmills for falls prevention in older adults: a review of training protocols and reporting recommendations (ProRePBT)
No abstract
Are Health and Negative Affect Decoupled in Late Adulthood? The Moderating Role of Self-Perceptions of Aging
ObjectivesPhysical health often declines with age, yet subjective well-being (SWB) tends to remain stable. Stereotype Embodiment Theory proposes that internalized self-perceptions of aging (SPAs) shape how physical changes are interpreted. This study tested whether SPA buffered the affective impact of health decline. The role of SPA was tested in midlife and late adulthood.MethodsData came from the ILSE, a population-based study of 1,002 adults initially aged 40 or 60 and followed for 20 years....
Differences across males and females in cognitive aging and mortality risk: a trajectory-based approach
This study examined hypothesized differences across males and females in the relationship between cognitive trajectories and mortality in older adults. Data were drawn from the ZARADEMP study on dementia and depression in adults aged 55 and older in Zaragoza, Spain. A total of 2403 cognitively healthy individuals who completed at least three of four waves over a 12-year follow-up were included. Cognitive trajectories were derived from Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores. Using growth...
The HIF-1alpha Pathway Regulates Satellite Cell Fate During Aging Through Histone Lactylation
Aging-associated sarcopenia is driven in part by the progressive loss of type II glycolytic fibers and the functional decline of their resident stem cells, the satellite cells (SCs). We show here that these defects result from attenuation of the hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) signaling pathway and can be reversed by pharmacological HIF-1α reactivation. In the tibialis anterior muscle of 18-month-old C57BL/6J mice, HIF-1α protein abundance decreased by ≈46% and canonical targets (Vegfa,...
Systems-level modelling of DNA damage, senescence, and stem cell dynamics in ageing
Ageing entails a variety of cellular and physiological changes that increase susceptibility to disease and death. A significant contributor to ageing is cellular senescence, a state of irreversible cell cycle arrest triggered by stressors such as DNA damage, telomere shortening, and the senescence-associated secretory phenotype. It is challenging to understand the nonlinear interactions between these complex mechanisms using conventional laboratory approaches. Mathematical modelling is capable...
Unravelling the therapeutic potential of chrysin against ischemic stroke and post-stroke cognitive impairment: a network pharmacology and in-silico perspective
Ischemic stroke (IS) is a cerebrovascular disorder that, if left untreated, can lead to secondary neurodegeneration and Post Stroke Cognitive Impairment (PSCI). Current therapies offer a narrow time window, highlighting the need for alternative approaches. Flavonoids, known for their neuroprotective properties, are promising candidates. Chrysin, a flavone with multiple pharmacological activities, was investigated for its therapeutic role in IS and PSCI. Pharmacokinetic and toxicological profiles...
Engineering d-orbital of copper single-atom sites toward industrial-level electrocatalytic methanation
Copper (Cu)-based single-atom catalysts (SACs) enable electrocatalytic CO(2) reduction into methane (CH(4)) fuel for thermal power plant decarbonization, yet conventional Cu SACs face industrial deployment barriers like instability and sluggish kinetics caused by d - p orbital coupling. Herein, we develop a Cu-Ti(1)O(3) catalyst with localized Cu single-atom sites by oxygen vacancy (O(v))-involved orbital engineering, achieving industrial-level CH(4) production. Theoretical and in-situ studies...
Association of brain age gap with BMD and incident fractures in the UK Biobank
The aging population experiences concurrent brain aging and deterioration of bone health. Imaging-derived brain age gap (BAG) demonstrates enhanced predictive capacity for age-related pathologies compared to chronological age. This study included 28,705 participants who underwent brain MRI at a mean age of 63.2 years, with brain age predicted from 1705 imaging-derived phenotypes using LASSO regression (mean predicted brain age: 63.2 years). We then assessed the associations of BAG with BMD at 4...
Arms races between selfish genetic elements and their host defence in termites
Arms races between parasites and hosts are key drivers of evolution. Selfishly replicating transposable elements (TEs) are thought to follow similar dynamics, but strong evidence is missing. We test this in termites, social insects in which TEs have been linked to ageing. Sequencing genomes and profiling DNA methylation across the termite phylogeny reveal corresponding phylogenetic signals in TEs and TE methylation, indicative of co-evolution. TE methylation reduces TE success, as both TE...
Briefing Chat: Caffeine slows brain ageing, suggests decades of data
No abstract
The ageing immune system as a driver of systemic ageing
Older individuals exhibit distinct biochemical and functional changes in their immune cells that can lead to chronic inflammation, reduced immunity to pathogens and organ dysfunction. Immune cells from older individuals acquire dysfunctional immunosenescent phenotypes that are classified as inflammatory, exhausted or senescent. Key molecular mechanisms, commonly described as hallmarks of ageing, drive the development of these phenotypes through both cell-autonomous and non-autonomous mechanisms....
Aging and Longevity: Latest results from PubMed
Subscribe to Aging & Longevity feed