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Epigenetic remodeling induced by fatty acids: Chromatin modifications and cellular senescence during lipid overload

2 weeks ago
Cellular senescence is a stable cell state sustained by specific gene expression programs that are established and maintained through dynamic changes in chromatin organization. Importantly, these programs are highly dependent on the nature of the senescence-inducing stimulus. In recent years, lipid overload has emerged as a relevant metabolic stress capable of inducing senescence across multiple cell types and tissues, particularly in the context of obesity and high-fat diets. Accumulating...
Karla Estephanía Ávila-Galicia

Associations of epigenetic age acceleration with motor impairment: Evidence from the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative cohort

2 weeks ago
Motor decline is a hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD) and biological aging, yet the specific relationship between systemic biological aging and neuromotor function remains under-characterized. This study leveraged longitudinal phenotypic and whole-blood DNA methylation data from the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) to evaluate associations between seven epigenetic aging measures, spanning first-generation, second-generation (risk-optimized), rate-based, and next-generation...
Tao Jiang

Genetic deletion of adenosine A<sub>2A</sub> receptors attenuates memory deterioration and alterations of synaptic plasticity and metabolic controllers in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex of aged mice

2 weeks ago
The incidence of brain diseases increases with aging, but the biological basis of brain aging is still poorly explored. Synaptic dysfunction occurs at the onset of brain diseases and synaptic neuromodulation systems, such as adenosine A(2A) receptors (A(2A)R), are necessary and sufficient to trigger brain dysfunction. Since A(2A)R are upregulated upon aging, we compared wild-type and A(2A)R global knockout mice to test if brain aging involves synaptic senescence linked to A(2A)R overfunction,...
Cátia R Lopes

STUB1-VCP/p97 complex regulates mitophagy via fine-tuning of PINK1 levels

2 weeks 1 day ago
PINK1 is a master regulator of PINK1-parkin-mediated mitophagy, a key process for maintaining mitochondrial homeostasis. The precise regulation of PINK1 is therefore essential for orchestrating mitophagy. While proteolytic processing of PINK1 and degradation of cleaved PINK1 via the N-end rule under basal conditions have been extensively characterized, the mechanisms governing full-length PINK1 degradation upon mitochondrial damage remain enigmatic. Here, we demonstrate that PINK1 undergoes...
Jin-Yi Lin

Lipid Metabolism and Neurodegeneration: Mechanistic Insights and Therapeutic Targets

2 weeks 1 day ago
Lipid metabolism plays a crucial role in maintaining brain homeostasis, affecting energy balance, membrane structure, and signaling pathways essential for neuronal and glial health. Disruption of lipid pathways is linked to neuroinflammation and the progression of neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, as well as aging. Changes in cholesterol trafficking, sphingolipid and ceramide metabolism, and phospholipid remodeling can compromise synaptic membrane integrity and...
Yessenia Marroquin Salas

NF-κB-activated fibroblasts orchestrate inflammaging and emergence of pro-inflammatory granzyme K<sup>+</sup> T cells

2 weeks 1 day ago
While inflammaging supposedly drives some of the most common diseases affecting the elderly, little is known about the tissue drivers of inflammaging. In this study, we demonstrate that age-dependent activation of nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) in tissue fibroblasts remodeled the immune architecture, promoting the emergence of an exhausted granzyme K (GZMK)^(+)CD8^(+) T cell population recently identified in normal aging as well as autoimmunity and cancer. Fibroblast-specific NF-κB activation...
Nancy C Allen

Generation of marmoset monkeys with a non-mosaic disruption of the OTOF gene as a model of human deafness

2 weeks 1 day ago
Disabling hearing impairment is a common human sensory deficit. OTOF is a major deafness gene. It codes for the synaptic protein otoferlin and is essential for transmitter release by inner hair cells (IHCs). Upon genetic loss of otoferlin, cochlear structure and function remain intact up to the IHC synapses, which fail to encode sound. Building on preclinical hearing restoration by AAV-mediated cochlear gene transfer in mice, clinical OTOF-gene-therapy trials are now targeting the pediatric...
Tobias Kahland

The Sirt2-Nur77 axis regulates muscle stem cell quiescence and senescence via epigenetic-metabolic synergy

2 weeks 1 day ago
Nur77 expression decreases with age in multiple organs, including the liver, brain, heart, and kidney, whereas Sirt2 increases with age in the mouse cerebral cortex and hippocampus. We identified the central role of the Sirt2-P300/Nur77/K310 acetylation axis in regulating muscle homeostasis and regeneration and its age-related alterations. Consistently, we observed reduced Nur77 and elevated Sirt2 expression in aging skeletal muscle, particularly the anterior tibialis, which is enriched in type...
Yanteng Wang

Lifespan stops at death, but when does healthspan stop?

2 weeks 1 day ago
This editorial delineates the conceptual distinctions among lifespan, longevity, and healthspan in biogerontology. Lifespan is defined as the chronological duration from birth to biological death. Longevity refers to the capacity for survival beyond the species-typical average and is best understood probabilistically rather than as a predetermined limit. Healthspan, by contrast, lacks a uniform definition but is most commonly described as the period of life free from major chronic disease and...
Suresh I S Rattan

Ten Years of Actor and Cross-Partner Influence on Cognitive Function: Between- and Within-Couple Analysis

2 weeks 1 day ago
CONCLUSION: The between-couple findings support the similarity-attraction theory and highlight gender-specific role transitions that influence cognitive aging, while the absence of within-couple cognitive concordance may be due to the length of assessment intervals or individual differences. These findings emphasize the need for future research with more frequent assessments and better control of trait-like characteristics to clarify these dynamics and support targeted cognitive health...
Zehao Zhang