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Should the Loch Ness Monster have a scientific name?
How did birds evolve? The answer is wilder than anyone thought
AlphaFold can help African researchers to do cutting-edge structural biology
AI writing tools could lead scholars from low-income countries to erase their own voices
Don’t assume that women’s low retraction rates reflect male ‘boldness’
No world-changing discoveries without biodiversity
Urban dandelions have evolved to stay close to home. That’s bad news
Small seed “parachutes” may be causing inbreeding
The earliest <em>Homo</em> species did not look human, partial skeleton shows
Homo habilis, 2 million years old, was known mainly from teeth and jaw bones
The Arctic’s ‘last ice area’ is showing signs of weakness
Mission to Canada’s Queen Elizabeth Islands reveals degradation of a sea ice haven
Zebrafish neural regeneration: mechanistic insights into human nervous system repair
The zebrafish (Danio rerio) is a powerful vertebrate model for studying neurodegenerative diseases and regenerative medicine due to its genetic similarity to humans and its unique ability to regenerate the central nervous system (CNS). This review synthesizes key findings on zebrafish neural regeneration across the retina, spinal cord, and brain, emphasizing translational relevance. Zebrafish effectively model disorders such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, stroke,...
CDK3 drives neuron loss in Alzheimer's disease
No abstract
The association between dietary inflammation index and peripheral neuropathy: Insights into the role of biological aging from a cross-sectional NHANES study
CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates a J-shaped association between DII and PN, which is partially accounted for by biological aging. These findings provide a new perspective for preventing PN through a low-inflammation diet.
Mechanical rejuvenation of senescent stem cells and aged bone via chromatin remodeling
Bone aging compromises skeletal integrity and increases vulnerability to osteoporosis and other age-related disorders, underscoring the need for new therapeutic strategies. Although pharmacological and genetic approaches have been widely explored, how cellular mechanical remodeling contributes to bone aging remains unclear. Here, we find that senescent bone marrow stem cells show markedly reduced intracellular force and impaired mechanical behavior. Moderate mechanical stimulation in cell...
Reserpine prolongs lifespan but compromises locomotion and heat-stress resilience in Drosophila melanogaster
Pharmacological modulation of monoaminergic signaling, a process targeted by many therapeutic and recreational drugs via receptors, transporters, degradation enzymes, or reuptake mechanisms, is emerging as a promising aging intervention and as a strategy to treat various maladies. Monoamines (including dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine) are central to the regulation of mood, movement, sleep, memory, and systemic physiology. Here, we demonstrate that Reserpine, chronic inhibitor of the...
Frailty-related plasma metabolomic signatures predict long-term mortality risk and implicate systemic aging pathways: evidence from a prospective cohort study
Frailty is a common geriatric syndrome associated with increased mortality, yet its underlying biological mechanisms and potential value for early risk stratification remain inadequately understood. In this large prospective cohort of more than 260,000 UK Biobank participants with plasma metabolomic profiling, we identified and validated metabolomic signatures of physical frailty and a 49-item frailty index using 50-times repeated 10-fold cross-validated elastic-net regression. The signatures...
FOXO: a key target in regulating aging and age-related diseases
FOXOs constitute a class of evolutionarily conserved transcription factors that play pivotal roles in diverse cellular processes, including glucose and lipid metabolism, energy homeostasis, oxidative stress response, and autophagy. They are recognized as central regulators of longevity. This review details the mechanisms linking FOXO to aging. FOXO activity is regulated via nucleocytoplasmic shuttling, a process controlled by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation through the insulin/insulin-like...
Higher burden of neuropsychiatric symptom-like behaviors associated with canine cognitive dysfunction compared to normal aging in the Dog Aging Project
Non-cognitive, neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) are nearly universal in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but investigation of their underlying biology is complicated by comparative medicine approaches that incompletely capture spontaneous disease, primarily using transgenic rodent models. The aged companion dog, which spontaneously develops an AD-like disease called canine cognitive dysfunction (CCD), may help fill this translational gap. Using data from the Dog Aging Project with > 10,000 aged dogs (>...
Adoptive T-cell therapies for persistent COVID-19 in immunocompromised patients: Comparison of IFN-γ virus-specific T-cell therapy and CD45RA<sup>+</sup> T-cell depleted donor lymphocyte infusion
Advanced age, comorbidities, and immunocompromised states remain major risk factors for severe or persistent COVID-19 despite vaccination and antivirals, underscoring the need for innovative treatments such as adoptive T-cell therapy (ATT). In this prospective single-center study, we evaluated the safety, feasibility, and efficacy of two ATT approaches in immunocompromised patients with high-risk or persistent SARS-CoV-2 infection: interferon-γ cytokine capture system virus-specific T cells...
Senotoxins target senescence via lipid binding specificity, ion imbalance and lipidome remodeling
Senescence is a driver of aging and a barrier to tumor progression, but its persistent accumulation drives inflammation and relapse. Thus, the success of chemotherapy could be jeopardized when senescence emerges in the tumor microenvironment. Here we identified the senolytic properties of a pore-forming toxin, sticholysin I (StnI). StnI and our engineered improved form, StnIG, selectively hampers viability of chemotherapy-induced senescent cancer cells, as well as senescent primary cells. We...
Perceived quality of home- and community-based services and urban-rural disparities in aging-in-place intentions: evidence from Chinese older adults
CONCLUSIONS: Findings underscore the need to improve HCBS accessibility and provider availability to support aging-in-place preferences. Urban areas require strategies addressing service proximity and workforce capacity, while rural regions benefit from enhanced service quantity and quality. These results highlight the importance of context-specific policies that account for both service quality perceptions and urban-rural disparities in China's aging population.