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Loss of p62 Binding Allows TIF-IA Accumulation in Senescence, Which Promotes Phenotypic Changes to Nucleoli and the Senescence Associated Secretory Phenotype
A key characteristic of senescent and ageing cells is a reduction in number and increase in size of nucleoli. Although a number of pathways have been suggested, the mechanisms underlying this altered nucleolar phenotype, and the downstream consequences, remain poorly understood. The PolI complex component, TIF-IA, has previously been implicated in regulating this characteristic nucleolar phenotype in response to stress. Here we explored the role of TIF-IA in senescence and ageing. We show that...
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Taxonomic and functional signatures of smoking and periodontitis severity in the subgingival microbiome of older adults
Periodontitis and smoking are major contributors to oral and systemic health deterioration in aging adults. This study investigated the combined effects of smoking status and periodontitis severity on the subgingival microbiome in 1107 individuals aged 69-72 using shotgun metagenomic sequencing. Smoking was linked to reduced microbial diversity, enrichment of periodontal pathogens, and depletion of health-associated commensals, while increasing periodontitis severity was associated with broader...
IL-17a induces age-related olfactory dysfunction by impairing regeneration and promoting respiratory metaplasia in mice
The olfactory epithelium (OE) undergoes life-long renewal and regeneration. This process is supported by the globose basal cells (GBC) during the homeostatic state, as well as horizontal basal cells (HBC) during severe damage. Inflamm-aging refers to the low-grade, chronic and progressive state of heightened pro-inflammation associated with aging. However, the impact of inflamm-aging on OE homeostasis, regeneration, and the inflammatory microenvironment is not fully understood. In this study...
Plasma proteomic signatures of social support and their association with cardiovascular disease and mortality: exploratory analyses in a national cohort study
Social support has been related to cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence and mortality in longitudinal cohort analyses, but the biological pathways underpinning this remain underexplored. This exploratory study examined the associations between social support and a wide range of proteomic biomarkers and performed the mediating effect of proteomic biomarkers in the association between social support and CVD and mortality to identify potential biological pathways linking social support to health...
Self-Organizing Ovarian Somatic Organoids Preserve Cellular Heterogeneity and Reveal Cellular Contributions to Ovarian Aging
Ovarian somatic cells are essential for reproductive function, but no existing ex vivo models recapitulate the cellular heterogeneity or interactions within this compartment. We engineered an ovarian somatic organoid model by culturing a stroma-enriched fraction of mouse ovaries in scaffold-free agarose micromolds. Self-organized ovarian somatic organoids maintained diverse cell populations, produced extracellular matrix, and secreted hormones. Organoids generated from reproductively old mice...
Body roundness index and mortality risk in chronic diseases: a national prospective longitudinal study in China
CONCLUSIONS: BRI is a multifaceted predictor of chronic disease mortality, with associations varying by disease pathophysiology and population characteristics. It offers a pragmatic tool for refining risk stratification in aging populations and challenges one-size-fits-all approaches to obesity management. Future research should investigate dynamic BRI trajectories and interactions with disease-specific biomarkers.
Threshold effects of physical activity and cognitive function among older adults with diabetes mellitus in NHANES 2011-2014
CONCLUSION: This study shows a clear inverted U-shaped relationship between physical activity and cognitive function in older adults with DM. Cognitive benefits do not increase with higher exercise volume and approximately 490 MET-minutes/week appears to be the optimal dose for preserving cognitive function in this population. Additional research is necessary to confirm these findings in future studies using objective, precise measures such as pedometers and accelerometers.
Measuring and decomposing inequalities in intrinsic capacity among older adults in china: from an urban-rural divide perspective
CONCLUSION: Chinese older adults showed inequality in IC, with more pronounced inequality in urban areas. Social activity and age are major contributing factors. Interventions such as promoting social participation, optimizing environmental resources, and implementing tailored urban-rural health policies are recommended to mitigate IC inequality and advance health equity.
The 3xTg-AD Mouse Model of Alzheimer's Disease Exhibits Lifelong Reductions in Circulating Choline Despite Adequate Dietary Intake, With Sex-Specific Neuropathological and Behavioral Phenotypes
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by amyloid-beta plaques and neurofibrillary tau tangles in the brain, neuroinflammation, and cognitive impairment. The 3xTg-AD mouse is a commonly used model in AD studies. 3xTg-AD males display inconsistent pathology; therefore, most studies utilize females. An understanding of why sexual dimorphism exists in this model is lacking. In humans, low circulating choline levels are associated with elevated AD pathology, while...
Not Aging but Calorie Restriction Strongly Affects Protein Oxidation in Heart and Brain Mitochondria
Aging is an inevitable consequence for all organisms. According to the mitochondrial free radical theory of aging (MFRTA), reactive oxygen species (ROS), which are predominantly generated in mitochondria, are assumed to play a key role. Calorie restriction (CR) delays aging by improving mitochondrial function; however, the molecular mechanisms underlying the effects of ROS and CR on mitochondria remain poorly understood. Oxidative protein modifications in mitochondrial proteins from the heart...