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Dysregulation of a novel autophagosome-mitochondria contact contributes to tauopathy-related neurodegeneration by disrupting autophagy

1 week 6 days ago
Beyond their role in energy production, mitochondria also interact with other organelles through forming membrane contacts that serve as central hubs of cellular metabolism and signaling. Aberrant mitochondria-organelle communication has been implicated in various neurodegenerative diseases, but the underlying mechanisms and their pathological consequences remain poorly understood. Here, we reveal that tauopathy synapses exhibit excessive tethering of autophagosome/autophagic vacuole...
Nuo Jia

Artificial intelligence in geriatric healthcare: a scoping review

1 week 6 days ago
CONCLUSIONS: Artificial intelligence holds significant promise for mitigating the global geriatric healthcare crisis exacerbated by demographic aging and nursing shortages. However, realizing its full potential requires a coordinated, multi-stakeholder approach to overcome the entrenched systemic, human, and social obstacles. The proposed roadmaps provide an actionable framework that may facilitate the development of artificial intelligence systems that are more efficient, equitable, and...
Yue Zhang

Scientists May Have Found What Really Triggers Alzheimer’s Disease

2 weeks ago
Scientists may have uncovered a hidden trigger behind Alzheimer’s disease. Instead of plaques being the root cause, amyloid beta appears to interfere with tau, a protein that helps keep neurons functioning properly. This disruption could set off the damage that eventually leads to the disease’s most recognizable brain changes.

Ancient DNA reveals plague was already killing humans 5,500 years ago

2 weeks ago
Plague was already a deadly killer 5,500 years ago, long before cities, farming, or the rat-infested conditions usually linked to historic outbreaks. By analyzing ancient DNA from hunter-gatherer cemeteries in Siberia, researchers discovered early plague strains in nearly 40% of the individuals studied and found evidence of rapid family-based outbreaks that wiped out many children and young teenagers.

Mechanisms and interventions of epigenetic aging

2 weeks ago
Increasing evidence suggests that epigenetic dysregulation is both a hallmark and a potential driving force of aging. As a multifactorial, non-linear, and systemic biological process, aging likely results from a progressive imbalance in a complex epigenetic network involving DNA, histones, RNA, and non-coding sequences. These interconnected alterations collectively lead to core aging features such as genomic instability, heightened inflammation, and loss of cellular identity. In this review, we...
Qingqing Chu

Mortality associated biological age improves independently of weight loss after bariatric surgery

2 weeks ago
Obesity increases the risk of common diseases and mortality, placing a significant burden on our aging society. Bariatric surgery results in significant weight loss; however, the amount of associated health gain is currently less studied, particularly in the first two years. We modelled mortality-associated biological age according to established blood markers in a prospective cohort of 505 patients that underwent bariatric surgery. The difference between biological age and chronological age...
Katharina Helena Morawitz

Uncovering senescent fibroblast heterogeneity connects DNA damage response to idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

2 weeks ago
Cellular senescence is a highly heterogeneous state of cell stress response that deleteriously accumulates with age and contributes to age-related dysfunction. While the heterogeneity across cell types is well documented, variation within the same cell type is only beginning to be understood. Here, we show primary human lung fibroblasts from either donors who are healthy or diagnosed with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) exhibit a subtle form of heterogeneity over time after DNA damage....
Jun-Wei B Hughes