Nature Aging
Reference centiles for intrinsic capacity to monitor clinical health outcomes in real-world primary care cohorts
Gut microbiota-dependent increase in phenylacetic acid induces endothelial cell senescence during aging
Author Correction: Single-cell and spatial RNA sequencing identify divergent microenvironments and progression signatures in early- versus late-onset prostate cancer
Stem cell therapies for Parkinson’s disease
Replacement as an aging intervention
Quasi-spatial single-cell transcriptome based on physical tissue properties defines early aging associated niche in liver
Recycling tRNA fragment ‘trash’ into treasure
Life-course approaches are needed to foster equitable healthy aging
Aging promotes reactivation of the Barr body at distal chromosome regions
X inactivation shows frail ends when mice age
KLRG1 identifies regulatory T cells with mitochondrial alterations that accumulate with aging
Valuing caregiving is a prerequisite for the wellbeing economy and mental wealth
Healthy diets for healthy aging
The retrotransposon<i>-</i>derived capsid genes <i>PNMA1</i> and <i>PNMA4</i> maintain reproductive capacity
Pre-symptomatic Parkinson’s disease blood test quantifying repetitive sequence motifs in transfer RNA fragments
Single-cell and spatial RNA sequencing identify divergent microenvironments and progression signatures in early- versus late-onset prostate cancer
New biomarkers for early-stage tau pathology in Alzheimer’s disease
Aging, regeneration and whole-body rejuvenation in long-lived planarians
Promoting health and survival through lowered body temperature
The effect of ambient air pollution (PM<sub>2.5</sub>) on dementia risk
How long will we live? And how much of that time will comprise a healthy life? What is aging, and can we stop or even reverse the aging process? What is the connection between aging and disease? Can we predict the evolving trends in the aging of human populations and prepare our societies for what has been called the Silver Tsunami? These are some of the important questions that the broad field of aging research is trying to address and that together form one of the Grand Challenges of the twenty-first century. The mission of Nature Aging is to provide a unique multidisciplinary, unifying and highly visible publishing platform for the aging-research community. The journal is highly selective yet broad in its coverage, publishing research from across the entire spectrum of the field, ranging from the basic biology of aging to the impact of aging on society. The journal aims to foster interactions among different areas of this diverse field of research and to promote new and exciting ideas within and beyond the research community, to enable synergy and maximize scientific and societal impact.
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