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This shapeshifting polymer was inspired by octopus skin
Socioeconomic reforms are needed to address disparities for the aging rural-to-urban migrant workforce in China
Evaluating music interventions to treat depression in people living with dementia
Chinese nuclear fusion reactor pushes plasma past crucial limit: what happens next
AI models were given four weeks of therapy: the results worried researchers
Disappearing ‘planet’ reveals a solar system’s turbulent times
New hepatitis B drug could help ‘functionally cure’ some patients
Scientists welcome GSK announcement that two trials succeeded—even though data are still lacking
World’s oldest whale harpoons discovered in Brazil
Far from the icy Arctic, ancient South Americans hunted whales using whalebone tools
Fake data from trial sites ruin studies, drug firms say
Alzheimer's drug developer accuses companies it hired of providing "medically impossible" results.
State-specific enhancer landscapes govern microglial plasticity
Single-cell transcriptomic studies have identified distinct microglial subpopulations with shared and divergent gene signatures across development, aging, and disease. Whether these microglial subsets represent ontogenically separate lineages of cells or are manifestations of plastic changes in microglial states downstream of some converging signals is unknown. Furthermore, despite the well-established role of enhancer landscapes underlying the identity of microglia, the extent to which histone...
Calcium overload induced mitochondrial and lysosomal dysfunction is regulated by Tousled-like kinase in a-synucleinopathy
As a pathological hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD), a-synucleinopathy induces various cellular damages, including calcium overload, mitochondrial and autophagic dysfunction, ultimately resulting in dopaminergic neuron death. However, the hierarchy of these detrimental events remains unclear. It is well established that a-synuclein can induce calcium overload through diverse mechanisms. To assess whether calcium overload plays a crucial detrimental role, we established a calcium overload...
Targeting C1q signaling in fibro-adipogenic progenitors prevents regenerative fibrosis of aged muscle
Skeletal muscle fibrosis, as occurs with age, in response to injury, or in the setting of degenerative diseases, results in impairments of muscle regeneration and function. Fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs), a distinct population of muscle-resident mesenchymal progenitor cells that reside in the muscle interstitium, play a crucial role in normal muscle regeneration by supporting muscle stem cell proliferation. However, in pathological conditions such as severe or recurrent muscle injury, FAPs...
Enhanced episodic specificity and socioemotional content in older adults' everyday autobiographical thoughts
Cognitive aging research has long observed that older adults' autobiographical memories and future thoughts, as assessed in laboratory contexts, lack spatiotemporal detail compared to young adults. Does this pattern also hold in everyday contexts? Across two studies, we examined characteristics of autobiographical thinking in real-world settings using ecological momentary assessment (EMA). Study 1 included an adult lifespan sample (N = 3,847). Study 2 (preregistered) included 217 young and older...
State-specific enhancer landscapes govern microglial plasticity
Single-cell transcriptomic studies have identified distinct microglial subpopulations with shared and divergent gene signatures across development, aging, and disease. Whether these microglial subsets represent ontogenically separate lineages of cells or are manifestations of plastic changes in microglial states downstream of some converging signals is unknown. Furthermore, despite the well-established role of enhancer landscapes underlying the identity of microglia, the extent to which histone...
Intrinsic capacity-frailty phenotypes and subclinical inflammation in community-dwelling octogenarians: A cross-sectional analysis from the ilSIRENTE study
CONCLUSIONS: IC-frailty phenotypes show a biological gradient of subclinical inflammation, with higher IC having lower inflammation levels. Preserved locomotion reflects key functional correlates of resilience and vitality in advanced age.
Ageing of human myofibres in the Vastus Lateralis muscle: A narrative review
Human skeletal muscle is a complex, dynamic tissue that changes profoundly with age. It comprises heterogenous cells including long, contractile, multinucleated myofibres, broadly classified into type I (slow-twitch/oxidative) fibres and type II (fast-twitch/glycolytic) fibres, as well as a variety of mononucleated cells (e.g., immune, satellite, and endothelial cells), and the extracellular matrix (ECM). Ageing as well as sarcopenia, a muscle condition characterised by progressive loss of...
The potential of prehabilitation to enhance recovery in sarcopenic and frail older kidney transplant candidates: A narrative review
CONCLUSION: Although the optimal structure of prehabilitation remains to be established, individualized multimodal interventions appear to hold promise for optimizing patients during the KT waiting period.
Platelet aging and desialylation increase apoptotic priming and BCL-X(L) dependence
Platelets are short-lived anucleate cells essential for primary hemostasis and recognized for their functions in thrombosis, immunity, antimicrobial defense, neurodegeneration, as well as cancer growth and metastasis. Their brief lifespan in circulation is controlled by the removal of sialic acid residues from the platelet surface (desialylation) and also the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway, with high expression of the anti-apoptotic protein BCL-X(L) being required for platelet survival. This...
Taurine transporter SLC6A6 expression promotes mesenchymal stromal cell function
Mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) differentiation is critical for the development, maintenance, and repair of bone tissue. MSCs also play a key role in regulating self-renewal and differentiation of normal hematopoietic and leukemic stem cells. Our prior work has identified a key role of taurine produced by bone marrow osteolineage cells in supporting the growth of taurine transporter (TauT or Slc6a6) expressing leukemia cells. Here, we analyze multiple murine non-hematopoietic bone marrow...
Dynamins maintain nuclear envelope homeostasis and genome stability
The nuclear envelope is a protective barrier for the genome and a mechanotransduction interface between cytoplasm and nucleus, whose malfunction disrupts nucleocytoplasmic transport, compromises DNA repair, accelerates telomere shortening, and promotes genomic instability. Mechanisms governing nuclear envelope remodeling and maintenance in interphase and post-mitotic cells remain poorly understood. Here, we report a role for dynamins, a family of essential brain-enriched membrane- and...