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Progressive mural cell deficiencies across the lifespan in a foxf2 model of cerebral small vessel disease
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is a leading cause of stroke and dementia and yet is often an incidental finding in aged patients due to the inaccessibility of brain vasculature to imaging. Animal models are important for modelling the development and progression of SVD across the lifespan. In humans, reduced FOXF2 is associated with an increased stroke risk and SVD prevalence in humans. In the zebrafish, foxf2 is expressed in pericytes and vascular smooth muscle cells and is involved in...
Socio-economic position and healthy ageing across the life course: a systematic review of longitudinal studies
Increasing health inequalities among older adults globally illustrate the urgent need for effective interventions. Socio-economic position (SEP), which reflects an individual's social and economic standing, may affect healthy ageing through various life course mechanisms. However, longitudinal associations between life course SEP and healthy ageing as a multidimensional construct remain unclear. We conducted a comprehensive systematic review of longitudinal studies investigating the associations...
Modifiable risk factors associated with increased retinal age gap in an Australian population
Retinal age gap (RAG)-the difference between retina-predicted age and chronological age-indicates biological ageing that has been linked to the risk of mortality and chronic disease. We aimed to identify risk factors associated with higher RAG in an Australian population. This cross-sectional study included 5107 participants from the Busselton Healthy Ageing Study (BHAS), a Western Australian community-based cohort. Retinal age was estimated using a validated deep-learning model applied to...
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Modelling the cosmos and imagining a future without meat: Books in brief
Electric-vehicle batteries toughen up to beat the heat
Briefing chat: What Galileo’s scribbled margin notes reveal about his scientific journey
The glycolytic metabolite phosphoenolpyruvate restricts cGAS-driven inflammation to promote healthy aging
Dietary restriction in aging and longevity
Mining the prodrome of neurodegeneration
A glycolytic metabolite puts the brakes on cGAS-driven aging
Genetically modified pig liver keeps man alive until human organ transplant
Career effects of preprints get mixed reviews from biomedical researchers
Junior researchers are more likely to embrace preprints; grant reviewers and hiring committees express doubts
NIH reneges on recognizing union for early-career researchers
The biomedical research agency says trainees in its labs are not “employees”
Targeting amyloid-β pathology by chimeric antigen receptor astrocyte (CAR-A) therapy
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the leading cause of dementia and is characterized by progressive amyloid accumulation followed by tau-mediated neurodegeneration. Despite advances in anti-amyloid immunotherapies, important limitations remain, highlighting the need for new therapeutic strategies. Here, we introduce anti-amyloid chimeric antigen receptors expressed in astrocytes (CAR-A) and validate their function in vitro. We show that two CAR-A designs reduce amyloid and associated pathology after...
Astrocytes engineered to fight Alzheimer's plaques
Genetically altered astrocytes reduce a cardinal pathological feature of Alzheimer's disease.