Aging & Longevity
Prevalence of Unmet Service Needs and Associated Person-Reported Outcomes in Long-Term Services and Supports in the United States
CONCLUSIONS: Consumer-reported unmet LTSS needs are frequent, vary greatly across care settings and funding programs, and are associated with poorer QoL-related outcomes; highlighting substantial system-level gaps in the fragmented LTSS landscape and the need for coordinated investments and structural reforms to better meet the needs of individuals relying on these services.
Epigenetic Gene Networks Governing Immune State Transitions Across the Lifespan
Immune function across development, tissue repair, aging, and disease depends not only on signaling pathways but also on epigenetic architectures that determine whether coordinated transcriptional programs can be accessed and resolved. Increasing evidence indicates that epigenetic gene networks regulate the accessibility and reversibility of semi-stable immune states, shaping plastic, homeostatic, reparative, and degenerative configurations. We propose the concept of epigenetic transition...
Amino acid and appendicular skeletal muscle mass insufficiency are associated to cognitive decline in Chinese population
The relation between cognitive impairment and skeletal muscle mass or physical exercise has been broadly discussed. However, the underlying molecular features have not been systemically investigated. Essential amino acids are the key factors for skeletal muscle mass. In the current study, we investigated the abundance of metabolites in the serum of ~ 1500 participants in various cognitive status from multiple centers. Our study revealed a positive correlation between serum level of essential AA...
Socioeconomic inequalities in quality of life among older adults in northwestern Iran: a cross-sectional study
CONCLUSION: Higher SES was associated with higher QOL. Older age and widowhood were also associated with lower QOL. Thus, enhancing financial support, expanding social services, and prioritizing the socioeconomically disadvantaged and widowed elderly may contribute to promoting equitable and healthy aging.
Artificial intelligence in geriatric healthcare: a scoping review
CONCLUSIONS: Artificial intelligence holds significant promise for mitigating the global geriatric healthcare crisis exacerbated by demographic aging and nursing shortages. However, realizing its full potential requires a coordinated, multi-stakeholder approach to overcome the entrenched systemic, human, and social obstacles. The proposed roadmaps provide an actionable framework that may facilitate the development of artificial intelligence systems that are more efficient, equitable, and...
Introducing Residents to Advocacy for Aging Incarcerated People: A Compassionate Release Pilot Elective
No abstract
Near-gaze fixation promotes use of spin turns during walking: age-independent visuomotor effects with maladaptive behavioral consequences in older adults
CONCLUSION: These findings identify gaze fixation as a key determinant of increased spin-turn use during turning in older adults, whereby constraining gaze to the near walking surface alters visual information available for step planning and promotes maladaptive turning strategy selection.
An aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase governs dsRNA-mediated trade-off between longevity and innate immunity
In this issue of Molecular Cell, Sohn et al.¹ explore how endogenous dsRNAs influence organismal aging and identify an unexpected function of the aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase FARS-1/FARSA in regulating mitochondrial dsRNA homeostasis to balance longevity and innate immunity.
Mechanisms and interventions of epigenetic aging
Increasing evidence suggests that epigenetic dysregulation is both a hallmark and a potential driving force of aging. As a multifactorial, non-linear, and systemic biological process, aging likely results from a progressive imbalance in a complex epigenetic network involving DNA, histones, RNA, and non-coding sequences. These interconnected alterations collectively lead to core aging features such as genomic instability, heightened inflammation, and loss of cellular identity. In this review, we...
Cardiometabolic biomarker domains and functional ageing: Cross-cohort evidence for incident mobility limitation
CONCLUSIONS: Cardiometabolic biomarker domains, particularly glycaemic dysfunction, were reproducibly associated with incident mobility limitation. A simple biomarker-burden score captured a relevant but incomplete component of functional ageing risk.
Mortality associated biological age improves independently of weight loss after bariatric surgery
Obesity increases the risk of common diseases and mortality, placing a significant burden on our aging society. Bariatric surgery results in significant weight loss; however, the amount of associated health gain is currently less studied, particularly in the first two years. We modelled mortality-associated biological age according to established blood markers in a prospective cohort of 505 patients that underwent bariatric surgery. The difference between biological age and chronological age...
Uncovering senescent fibroblast heterogeneity connects DNA damage response to idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
Cellular senescence is a highly heterogeneous state of cell stress response that deleteriously accumulates with age and contributes to age-related dysfunction. While the heterogeneity across cell types is well documented, variation within the same cell type is only beginning to be understood. Here, we show primary human lung fibroblasts from either donors who are healthy or diagnosed with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) exhibit a subtle form of heterogeneity over time after DNA damage....
High-resolution MRI evidence for age- and sex-related changes in hippocampal subfield volume during healthy aging
Hippocampal volume is associated with memory and is critical in Alzheimer's disease, but few studies have examined hippocampal subfield volume changes during healthy aging. Herein, we utilize submillimeter MRI to examine age- and sex-specific subfield volumetric changes in 206 participants (M(age) = 53.05 years, range = 21-87, N(female) = 110). Total intracranial volume was regressed out and hierarchical regression was performed to examine subfield volume changes with age. To identify inflection...
POLY-Senolytic nanoplatform for tumor-specific eradication of senescent tumor cells and mitigation of radiotherapy-induced immune resistance of cancer
Radiotherapy (RT) efficacy is limited by RT-induced immune resistance. Here we show that RT upregulates programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) on senescent tumor cells (STCs) via bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4) signaling, thereby promoting immune evasion. To counter this, we develop POLY-Senolytic, a polymeric senolytic nanoparticle formed by conjugating an acid-responsive polymer to a peptide-based BRD4 PROteolysis-TArgeting Chimera via a reduction-cleavable disulfide bond. The...
Poorer Physical Function Is Associated With Elevated Spatial Entropy in the Aging Brain Network Landscape
Life is a constant struggle against disorder. As we age, our ability to maintain internal order declines. In the healthy human brain, order is observable in the form of functionally segregated brain network communities that exhibit spatial consistency. These communities associate with distinct cognitive and physical functions. When mapped into the brain, they form a functional "landscape". We assessed the spatial disorder of these landscapes in older adults with a wide range of mobility using a...
Aging, Dauer, and Stature Phenotypes Are Conferred by Structure-Directed Missense Mutations in the Endogenous AGE-1/Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase Catalytic Subunit
Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) integrates insulin/IGF signaling (IIS) and Ras inputs to control lifespan, metabolism and growth. Yet the organismal consequences of selective structural perturbations remain poorly understood. Using structure-guided CRISPR/Cas9-dependent genome editing, we dissected functions of AGE-1, the sole Class IA PI3K catalytic subunit in Caenorhabditis elegans. An endogenously tagged AGE-1, containing a long flexible linker, epitope and fluorescent tag, retained full...
Atypical Tetracyclines Promote Longevity and Ferroptotic Neuroprotection via Translation Attenuation
Reducing protein synthesis extends lifespan across taxa, but pharmacological strategies to safely attenuate translation remain limited. Tetracyclines are clinically used antibiotics long observed to exert beneficial effects in age-associated diseases and extend lifespan in model organisms, though the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we systematically profiled commercially available tetracyclines and show that translation attenuation is a general property of the tetracycline class....
Endothelial KLF4 depletion drives age-related neurovascular dysfunction and neuropsychiatric impairment
Deterioration of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), including impaired neurovascular uncoupling, contributes to cognitive decline in aging. The BBB is formed principally by brain microvascular endothelial cells (ECs), and ECs throughout the body are enriched for the transcription factor Krüppel-like factor 4 (KLF4). Because KLF4 levels in ECs decrease with age, we tested whether that decline contributes to aging-related BBB deterioration, neurovascular dysfunction, and cognitive impairment. Using...
Age and early life adversity shape heterogeneity of the epigenome across tissues in macaques
Age and early life adversity (ELA) are key determinants of health, but whether they affect similar physiological mechanisms across tissues is unknown. We generated DNA methylation (DNAm) profiles across 14 tissues in 237 semi-free-ranging rhesus macaques with naturally occurring ELA. Age-associated DNAm was predominantly tissue dependent, yet tissue-specific epigenetic clocks showed that epigenetic aging was relatively consistent within individuals. ELA effects were adversity dependent, but each...
Targeting brain rhythms to support cognition in aging: a systematic review and meta-analysis of tACS across healthy aging, mild cognitive impairment, and Alzheimer's disease
Cognitive decline is a major challenge in aging. Transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) modulates neural oscillations, potentially aiding cognition. Due to variation in late-life tACS studies, we conducted the first meta-analysis in older adults (≥ 60 years) to estimate pooled cognitive effects and determine if protocol parameters explain outcome variability. We searched Medline/PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and ClinicalTrials.gov (up to September 17, 2025) for studies examining...
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