Aggregator
The metabolic engine of cognition: microglia-neuron interactions in health, ageing and disease
Cognitive impairment is associated with perturbations of fine-tuned neuroimmune interactions. At the molecular level, alterations in cellular metabolism can compromise brain function, driving structural damage and cognitive deficits. In this Review, we focus on the bidirectional interactions between microglia, the brain-resident immune cells and neurons to dissect the metabolic determinants of brain resilience and cognition. We first outline these metabolic pathways during development and adult...
Progressive remote memory decline coincides with parvalbumin interneuron hyperexcitability and enhanced inhibition of cortical engram cells in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease
Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) initially show temporally graded retrograde amnesia, which gradually progresses into more severe retrograde amnesia. Although mouse models of AD have provided insight into neurobiological mechanisms contributing to impaired formation and retrieval of new memories, the process underlying the progressive loss of remote memories in AD has remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate age-dependent remote memory decline in APP/PS1 mice, which coincides with...
The efficacy of longevity interventions in Caenorhabditis elegans is determined by the early life activity of RNA splicing factors
Geroscience aims to target the aging process to extend healthspan. However, even isogenic individuals show heterogeneity in natural aging rate and responsiveness to pro-longevity interventions, limiting translational potential. Using RNAseq analysis of young, isogenic, subpopulations of Caenorhabditis elegans selected solely on the basis of the splicing pattern of an in vivo minigene reporter that is predictive of future life expectancy, we find a strong correlation in young animals between...
Erratum for the Research Article "Heterochronic parabiosis uncovers AdipoR1 as a critical player in retinal rejuvenation" by Y. Liu et al
No abstract
Variations in body condition score, inflammatory and metabolic biomarkers predict cognitive changes in clinically healthy senior cats
CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: Findings suggest that changes in physiological parameters describing patterns of chronic inflammation are associated with measurable cognitive changes in aging cats, in the absence of overt clinical disease, which is consistent with the concept of inflammaging. Routine monitoring of standard bloodwork and BCS may offer an accessible means of tracking chronic subclinical inflammation and predicting cognitive aging in senior feline patients. These results highlight the...
Exclusive: CDC to end all monkey research
Studies related to HIV and other infectious diseases will be phased out, sources say; fate of the agency's animals remains unclear
Daily briefing: Where pigeons get their sense of direction
Synthetic tongue rates chillies’ heat — and spares human tasters
I encourage women to claim their space in astrophysics and beyond
Cyberattacks' harm to universities is growing — and so are their effects on research
Psychedelics and immortality: <i>Nature</i> went to a health summit starring RFK and JD Vance
Of masks and Mayans: Books in brief
How to defuse a time bomb
Can a smaller U.S. National Academies remain relevant?
Loss of federal support leads to staff layoffs and fewer committees of outside experts
Global carbon emissions will soon flatten or decline
With China’s surge in renewable energy, greenhouse gases are reaching a turning point
Airplane contrails may not be the climate villain once feared
Studies raise questions about the benefits of adjusting flight paths to minimize heat-trapping clouds
Why does biology keep building things out of tiles?
Science talks with two scientists about finding the beauty in nature’s mosaics
Magnetic resonance imaging analysis for Alzheimer's disease diagnosis using artificial intelligence: Methods, challenges, and opportunities
Alzheimer's disease(AD) is the most common cause of dementia and affects millions of people worldwide. The early and accurate diagnosis of AD is crucial for timely intervention and disease management. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a widely used noninvasive technique for assessing brain structure and function in patients with AD. However, conventional MRI analysis methods are often subjective, time-consuming, and depend on expert knowledge. Artificial intelligence (AI), particularly deep...
A unified mechanism for mitochondrial damage sensing in PINK1-Parkin-mediated mitophagy
Damaged mitochondria can be cleared from the cell by mitophagy, using a pathway formed by the recessive Parkinson's disease genes PINK1 and Parkin. Whether the pathway senses diverse forms of mitochondrial damage via a common mechanism, however, remains uncertain. Here, using a novel Parkin reporter in genome-wide screens, we identified that diverse forms of mitochondrial damage converge on loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) to activate PINK1. Loss of MMP, but not the presequence...
Cortical PV interneurons regulate loudness perception and sustainably reverse loudness hypersensitivity
Parvalbumin-expressing inhibitory neurons (PVNs) stabilize cortical network activity, generate gamma rhythms, and regulate experience-dependent plasticity. We found that PVNs act like a volume knob in the mouse auditory cortex (ACtx), bi-directionally adjusting neural and perceptual sensitivity to sound level over a 20 dB range. PVN-based gain adjustments were "sticky," such that a single bout of PVN activation at 40 Hz-but not at 1 or 70 Hz-sustainably dampened ACtx sound responsiveness,...