Nature Aging
Aged eggs improve within young follicles
Leonard Hayflick (1928–2024)
Total physical activity matters for brain health
Lymphoma lurks within aged B cells
Probabilistic inference of epigenetic age acceleration from cellular dynamics
Author Correction: Older age reduces mtDNA mutation inheritance
Serum protein patterns are associated with future diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease
Challenges and recommendations for the translation of biomarkers of aging
Author Correction: Serum proteomics reveal <i>APOE-ε4</i>-dependent and <i>APOE-ε4</i>-independent protein signatures in Alzheimer’s disease
Aged bone marrow macrophages drive systemic aging and age-related dysfunction via extracellular vesicle-mediated induction of paracrine senescence
Incompetent neck valves threaten the aging brain
Publisher Correction: A plasma protein-based risk score to predict hip fractures
Preexisting senescent fibroblasts in the aged bladder create a tumor-permissive niche through CXCL12 secretion
Rejuvenation of aged oocyte through exposure to young follicular microenvironment
Stromal cell dysfunction contributes to thymic decline in aging
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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