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Mechanism of age-related accumulation of mtDNA mutations in human blood

5 days 18 hours ago
Accumulation of mutant mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) heteroplasmy is among the strongest signatures of ageing¹. Here we investigated the underlying mechanism by calling mtDNA sequence, mtDNA abundance and mtDNA heteroplasmic variants in human blood using whole-genome sequences from approximately 750,000 individuals. We observed that mtDNA single-nucleotide variants (mtSNVs) accumulate sharply at age 60 years, occur at low levels of heteroplasmy, exhibit little evidence of positive selection and are...
Rahul Gupta

Human haematopoietic stem cells remember inflammatory stress

5 days 18 hours ago
Inflammation activates blood cells, contributing to ageing and malignancy^(1-3). Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) survive a lifetime of infection to sustain life-long haematopoiesis^(1-9), but how human HSCs respond and adapt to inflammatory stress is largely unknown. Here, to empirically understand this adaptation, we developed xenograft inflammation-recovery models and performed single-cell multiomics on xenografted human HSCs. Two transcriptionally and epigenetically distinct HSC subsets were...
Andy G X Zeng

Lifespan normative modeling of brain microstructure

5 days 18 hours ago
Normative models of brain metrics based on large populations could be extremely valuable for detecting brain abnormalities in patients with a variety of disorders, including degenerative, psychiatric and neurodevelopmental conditions, but no such models exist for the brain's white matter (WM) microstructure. Here we present a large-scale normative model of brain WM microstructure - based on 19 international diffusion MRI datasets covering almost the entire lifespan (totaling N = 54,583...
Julio E Villalón-Reina

Glycogen drives the sensory activation of POMC neurons

5 days 18 hours ago
Hypothalamic POMC neurons modulate systemic energy balance and glucose homeostasis by sensing nutritional state signals. In addition to this classic regulatory mode, these neurons are also activated by the sensory perception of food. Here, we report that food-related sensory cues engage glycogen metabolism in POMC neurons. Genetic depletion of glycogen through various approaches renders POMC neurons unresponsive to food-associated sensory stimuli. This defective perception of food is linked to...
Alicia G Gómez-Valadés

Multicellular senescence impairs skeletal muscle recovery following disuse in aging

5 days 18 hours ago
Aged skeletal muscle has a diminished capacity to recover after disuse. Although muscle regrowth requires coordinated interactions between immune and progenitor cells, the mechanisms of impaired remodeling in aged skeletal muscle remain poorly understood yet possibly involve the accumulation of senescent cells. We used a flow cytometry approach coupled with scRNAseq to determine the muscle senescent cell identity and transcriptional landscape during skeletal muscle recovery following disuse...
Paul-Emile Bourrant

TPM1 drives cytoskeleton-immunometabolism coupling and LGALS9/CD45-mediated neuroinflammatory propagation in retinitis pigmentosa

5 days 18 hours ago
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP), the most prevalent inherited retinal degeneration, features progressive photoreceptor loss with no approved disease-modifying therapies. While microglia-driven neuroinflammation accelerates RP progression, its sustaining mechanisms remain elusive. Through integrated multiomics profiling of retinal degeneration 10 (rd10) mice, we identify tropomyosin 1 (TPM1) as a previously unrecognized cytoskeletal-immune regulator orchestrating spatial neuroinflammation in RP....
Rong Li

Natural tissue immortality: Indefinite survival of sea cucumber explants

5 days 18 hours ago
Senescence and immortality are central biological paradigms. While regenerative capabilities in Deuterostomia are known, the fate of lost and discarded tissues has been presumed terminal. Here, we demonstrate that explanted epidermal, connective, neural, and muscle tissue from the sea cucumber Psolus fabricii (Holothuroidea: Echinodermata) healed and continued to grow in natural, nonaxenic seawater without supplementation for more than 3 years. In experimental trials, these explants, termed...
Sara Jobson

Aging modulatory effects of a decoction in Drosophila and C. elegans: mechanistic insights through NMR-based metabolomics

5 days 18 hours ago
As the challenges posed by an aging population become increasingly apparent, the prevention and treatment of age-related diseases have become key research priorities. This study hypothesizes that Zhizi Baipi Decoction exhibits aging modulatory effects. Traditional Chinese Medicine Decoction that has been passed down for generations and remains widely used in contemporary clinical practice. Due to their short lifespan, well-defined genetic backgrounds, and ease of manipulation, model organisms...
Qi Guo

Respirometry-Based Screening of Marine Natural Products Identifies Leptochelin A as a Novel Modulator of Mitochondrial Function

5 days 18 hours ago
While mitochondria are recognized as promising therapeutic targets for common pathologies of aging, existing drug discovery platforms fail to capture the adequate physiological and biological contexts necessary to identify translatable, clinically-relevant leads. The goal of this study was to identify marine natural products that modulate mitochondrial function using a screening pipeline leveraging primary human cells in a cell-based phenotypic primary screen. Using this approach, we identified...
Howard J Phang

Decreases in the sustained firing capacity of layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons in the anterior cingulate cortex of aged rats

5 days 18 hours ago
The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is particularly vulnerable to aging, which impairs cognitive functions such as attention and working memory. Although aging is known to alter intrinsic electrophysiological properties in other brain regions, the differences in the properties of aged ACC neurons and young adult neurons remain uninvestigated. In this study, we compared the intrinsic membrane properties and firing characteristics of aged layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons (26-month-old rats) with those...
Taketoshi Sugimura

Scientists say guava juice could make iron supplements work better

5 days 21 hours ago
Researchers found that drinking guava juice may significantly improve anemia by helping the body absorb iron more efficiently. In a review of 17 studies, women and teenage girls who consumed guava juice — especially with iron supplements — experienced noticeable increases in hemoglobin levels. Since guava contains far more vitamin C than oranges, scientists believe it could become a simple, affordable nutrition tool in regions where anemia is widespread.