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Multimorbidity is associated with myocardial DNA damage, nucleolar stress, dysregulated energy metabolism, and senescence in cardiovascular disease
This study investigates why individuals with multimorbidity-two or more chronic conditions-are more prone to adverse outcomes after surgery. In our cohort, ninety-eight of 144 participants had multimorbidity. The myocardial transcriptome and metabolites involved in energy production were measured in 53 and 57 sequential participants, respectively. Untargeted analysis of the metabolome in blood and myocardium was performed in 30 sequential participants. Mitochondrial respiration in circulating...
Rab8a restores diverse innate functions in CD11c<sup>+</sup>CD11b<sup>+</sup> dendritic cells from aged mice
Age-related alterations of the immune system compromise the host's ability to respond to pathogens, but how immune aging is regulated is still poorly understood. Here, we identify via transcriptomic analysis of splenic DCs and bone marrow derived dendritic cells (BMDC) of young and aged mice, the small GTPase Rab8a as a regulator of dendritic cell (DC) functions in mice. CD11c^(+)CD11b^(+) DCs of aged in comparison to young host exhibit a diminished type I IFN response upon viral stimulation and...
Sex differences in skeletal muscle metabolism in exercise and type 2 diabetes mellitus
This Review focuses on currently available literature describing sex differences in skeletal muscle metabolism in humans, as well as highlighting current research gaps within the field. These discussions serve as a call for action to address the current lack of sufficient sex-balanced studies in skeletal muscle research, and the resulting limitations in understanding sex-specific physiological and pathophysiological responses. Although the participation of women in studies has increased, parity...
Advancing prediction of age-related vascular cognitive impairment based on peripheral and retinal vascular health in a pilot study: a novel comprehensive assessment developed for a prospective workplace-based cohort (The Semmelweis Study)
With a growing elderly population in the European Union, age-related diseases associated with unhealthy aging pose increasing public health challenges, including a loss of independence and heightened societal burdens. The Semmelweis Study, a prospective occupational cohort study in Hungary, seeks to identify determinants of unhealthy aging, focusing on the complex relationship between lifestyle, environmental, occupational factors, and the development of chronic age-associated diseases,...
Dysregulation of astrocytic Aquaporin-1 in the brains of oldest-old rhesus macaques: the NIA caloric restriction study
Aquaporin-1 (AQP1) is a highly conserved water-channel protein, found to be expressed by astrocytes in adult humans and non-human primates (NHPs). Upregulation of cortical AQP1 expression occurs with cancer, injury, and neurodegenerative disease, but minimal information is available about the effects of normative aging on AQP1 expression. This study leverages tissues from the oldest-old rhesus macaques, some greater than 40 years of age, from the National Institute on Aging longitudinal study of...
Late-life protein or isoleucine restriction impacts physiological and molecular signatures of aging
Restricting the intake of protein or the branched-chain amino acid isoleucine promotes healthspan and extends lifespan in young or adult mice. However, their effects when initiated in aged animals are unknown. Here we investigate the consequences of consuming a diet with 67% reduction of all amino acids (low AA) or of isoleucine alone (low Ile), in male and female C57BL/6J.Nia mice starting at 20 months of age. Both dietary regimens effectively promote overall metabolic health without reducing...
Transposable element 5mC methylation state of blood cells predicts age and disease
Transposable elements (TEs) are DNA sequences that expand selfishly in the genome, possibly causing severe cellular damage. While normally silenced, TEs have been shown to activate during aging. DNA 5-methylcytosine (5mC) is one of the main epigenetic modifications by which TEs are silenced and has been used to train highly accurate age predictors. Yet, one common criticism of such predictors is that they lack interpretability. In this study, we investigate the changes in TE 5mC methylation that...
Study design features increase replicability in brain-wide association studies
Brain-wide association studies (BWAS) are a fundamental tool in discovering brain-behaviour associations^(1,2). Several recent studies have shown that thousands of study participants are required for good replicability of BWAS^(1-3). Here we performed analyses and meta-analyses of a robust effect size index using 63 longitudinal and cross-sectional MRI studies from the Lifespan Brain Chart Consortium⁴ (77,695 total scans) to demonstrate that optimizing study design is critical for increasing...
Sociodemographic determinants of mobility decline among community-dwelling older adults: findings from the Canadian longitudinal study on ageing
CONCLUSION: Our study underscored the impact of modifiable and non-modifiable sociodemographic determinants of mobility trajectory. There is a need for nuanced ageing policies that support mobility in older adults, considering sociodemographic inequalities through equitable resource distribution, including people of lower socioeconomic backgrounds.
Epigenetic age acceleration predicts subject-specific white matter degeneration in the human brain
Epigenetic clocks provide powerful tools for estimating health and lifespan but their ability to predict brain degeneration and neuronal damage during the aging process is unknown. In this study, we use GrimAge, an epigenetic clock correlated to several blood plasma proteins, to longitudinally investigate brain cellular microstructure in axonal white matter from a cohort of healthy aging individuals. A specific focus was made on white matter hyperintensities, a visible neurological manifestation...
‘Systematic reviews’ that aim to extract broad conclusions from many studies are in peril
Fake papers are “poisoning the well” for these gold-standard syntheses, researchers say
Daily briefing: Fossilized poo and vomit show how dinosaurs rose to dominance
Raising a glass to the Four Friends Doing Science journal club
These two ancient human relatives crossed paths 1.5 million years ago
Individual variability of neural computations underlying flexible decisions
Durable all inorganic perovskite tandem photovoltaics
Neither climate laboratory nor knowledge vacuum: What’s at stake for the Global South in the debate around solar geoengineering research
Science, Volume 386, Issue 6725, November 2024.
‘That’s funny’: creative solutions for time-starved researchers
In Science Journals
Science, Volume 386, Issue 6725, Page 983-985, November 2024.
Harness agrifood value chains to help farmers be climate smart
Science, Volume 386, Issue 6725, Page 974-977, November 2024.