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Cellular survivorship bias as a mechanistic driver of muscle stem cell aging
Aging is characterized by a decline in the ability of tissue repair and regeneration after injury. In skeletal muscle, this decline is largely driven by impaired function of muscle stem cells (MuSCs) to efficiently contribute to muscle regeneration. We uncovered a cause of this aging-associated dysfunction: a cellular survivorship bias that prioritizes stem cell persistence at the expense of functionality. With age, MuSCs increased expression of a tumor suppressor, N-myc down-regulated gene 1...
Mito-nuclear communication: From cellular responses to organismal health
The co-evolution of mitochondria and the nucleus established constant mito-nuclear communication that is essential for both cellular and organismal homeostasis. At the cell-autonomous level, mitochondrial perturbations activate retrograde pathways such as the mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPR^(mt)) and the mitochondrial integrated stress response (ISR^(mt)), which couple organelle dysfunction to nuclear transcriptional programs, thereby promoting mitochondrial function and preserving...
Epidemiological approaches to refine biomarkers of aging
No abstract
Comparative analysis of senolytic drugs reveals mitochondrial determinants of efficacy and resistance
Cellular senescence contributes to aging and disease, and senolytic drugs that selectively eliminate senescent cells hold therapeutic promise. Although over 20 candidates have been reported, their relative efficacies remain unclear. Here we systematically compared 21 senolytic agents using a senolytic specificity index, identifying the Bcl-2 inhibitor ABT263 and the BET inhibitor ARV825 as most effective senolytics across fibroblast and epithelial senescence models. However, even upon extended...
Longevity is in the genes: half of lifespan is heritable
No abstract
Pantropical moist forests are converging towards a middle leaf longevity
Leaf longevity is a fundamental plant trait that largely explains ecosystem functional dynamics in global pantropical moist forests. However, the signs, magnitudes, and mechanisms of the spatiotemporal variations in leaf longevity with ongoing climate change are still lacking. Using both ground measurements and gridded leaf age-dependent leaf area index data, we map the continental-scale variability of annual mean leaf longevity across pantropical moist forests over 2001-2023. We find a...
Social connections are differentially related to subjective age and physiological age acceleration amongst older adults
Human social connections are complex ecosystems formed of structural, functional and quality components. Weak social connections are associated with adverse age-related health outcomes, but we know little about the ageing-related processes underlying this. Using data from 7047 adults aged 50+ in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, we explore associations between diverse aspects of social connections and both older subjective age and accelerated physiological age using a validated...
In a twist, polar bears are getting fatter in the Norwegian Arctic
With sea ice dwindling, the massive predators are relying more on land-based food sources such as reindeer
Advancing depression assessment in older adults with cancer: Development and validation of the Older Adults with Cancer-Depression Scale (OAC-D), a novel, patient-reported outcome
CONCLUSIONS: The OAC-D identified five unique domains of depression, only one of which overlapped with DSM criteria. It demonstrated robust psychometric properties, providing a nuanced alternative to DSM-based measures and addressing the distinctive psychological challenges of cancer and aging.
Longitudinal association between oral health and dementia among older adults: evidence from the Korean longitudinal study of ageing
No abstract
Associations Between 40-Year Trajectories of BMI and Proteomic and Epigenetic Aging Clocks: Deciphering Nonlinearity and Interactions
The potential of proteomic aging clocks for obesity research, and the extent of nonlinearity in longitudinal associations between body weight and biological aging, remain underexplored. We investigated how BMI at ages 18 and ~60, as well as changes in BMI from age 18 to ~60, relate to downstream epigenetic and proteomic aging. We also examined nonlinearity and interactions in these associations. Analyses were conducted in 401 Finnish twins with up to nine self-reported or measured BMI values...
The aggregate proteome of Caenorhabditis elegans mitochondria implicates shared mechanisms of aging and Alzheimer's disease
CONCLUSION: These findings place mitochondrial proteome collapse at the center of aging and AD-seeded pathology, distinguish Aβ- and Tau-driven proteotoxic routes, and nominate a conserved panel of aggregation-prone proteins as mechanistic drivers and candidate biomarkers for early detection and intervention in AD.
Daily briefing: Brain–immune crosstalk worsens the damage of heart attacks
48 hours without lungs: artificial organ kept man alive until transplant
Still conscious? Brain marker signals when anaesthesia takes hold
Genetically engineered ‘stinkweed’ comes up roses for making seed oil
Longevity is in the genes: half of lifespan is heritable
Author Correction: Hunter-gatherer sea voyages extended to remotest Mediterranean islands
The ‘undone science’ of opioid overdose deaths
Science, Volume 391, Issue 6784, January 2026.
The origin of hepatocellular carcinoma depends on metabolic zonation
Science, Volume 391, Issue 6784, January 2026.