Aging & Longevity
Dose-dependent mitochondrial H(2)O(2) signaling drives toxicity or stress adaptation and longevity in fission yeast
The spatiotemporal dynamics of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) signaling and its effects on gene expression and cell fitness remain unclear. Using fission yeast, we applied genetic tools to control and monitor intracellular H(2)O(2) levels. We expressed the H(2)O(2) biosensor HyPer7 in four subcellular compartments, overexpressed D-amino acid oxidase (Dao1) in specific locations to induce localized H(2)O(2) production, and modulated H(2)O(2) detoxification or sensing. H(2)O(2) concentrations showed...
Multi-omic profiling reveals pericyte and smooth muscle cell contributions to CADASIL pathology in cell-specific Notch3 mutant mice
Cerebral ischemic small vessel disease (SVD) is a leading cause of vascular dementia and stroke. Cerebral autosomal-dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), the most common monogenic SVD, is caused by dominant missense mutations in Notch3 expressed in smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and pericytes. However, cell-type-specific contributions driving CADASIL remain unknown. Here, we generate two conditional knockin mouse models carrying the CADASIL-causing...
FOXF1/2 establish a senescence-specific enhancer landscape to activate the pro-inflammatory senescence-associated secretory phenotype
The pro-inflammatory, senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) is a hallmark of senescent cells (SnCs) that exacerbates age-related pathophysiology and chronic diseases. Although unique gene regulation is essential for fulfilling the pro-inflammatory SASP, the epigenomic basis in SnCs remains largely unknown. Here, we show that FOXF1/2 define the senescence-specific enhancer landscape by shaping chromatin accessibility. FOXF1/2 interact with p300/CREB-binding protein (CBP) and stimulate...
Gene Therapy for Aging: Current Evidence and Future Directions
The global aging population presents a pressing challenge, highlighting the urgent need for interventions that target the fundamental mechanisms of aging. Gene therapy, leveraging its success in treating monogenic and aging-related diseases such as progeria and neurodegenerative disorders, has emerged as a promising strategy. It holds the potential not only to mitigate specific age-related pathologies but also to robustly extend healthspan. Although preclinical studies have shown encouraging...
Targeting the liver for longevity
The liver performs a wide range of physiological functions, including lipid/glucose metabolism, energy storage, immune regulation, molecular biosynthesis, and the clearance of xenobiotics, all of which are essential for maintaining systemic homeostasis. Liver ageing increases its susceptibility to acute stress and injury, which in turn enhances the body's sensitivity to ageing-related responses. These processes interact with other organs, accelerating systemic ageing and the pathogenesis of...
Lactylation: Unlocking the Regulatory Code of Exercise-Mediated Anti-Aging
Aging is a complex biological process characterized by the loss of metabolic homeostasis, epigenetic drift, and systemic functional decline. Although exercise is widely recognized as a potent non-pharmacological intervention for aging, the mechanisms by which it translates transient metabolic fluctuations into long-term systemic adaptations remain incompletely understood. During physical activity, skeletal muscle exhibits significantly enhanced glycolytic flux, leading to the accumulation of...
N6-methyladenosine RNA methylation is modulated in aging and age-related diseases
Alterations in the epigenetic transcriptome are crucial in the aging process and the occurrence of age-related diseases. This study aims to define global RNA methylation patterns in nursing home residents, an aged population with a high burden of age-related health deficits and sharing a common environment. The study was conducted on RNA samples extracted from blood samples of 56 older adults in a nursing home and of 36 young subjects living independently in their own homes. The RNA samples were...
Bedrest, frailty and exercise countermeasures: A 14-day head-down tilt study in mid-older aged adults
CONCLUSIONS: Bed rest was associated with increases in frailty that were not fully reversed by four months. Exercise during bed rest could support earlier recovery. These findings highlight the harmful effects of bed rest and the potential role of exercise for hospitalised adults.
Associations of physical activity intensity with the non-high-density lipoprotein to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio and mortality in middle-aged and older adults: New evidence from China
CONCLUSIONS: This study adds large-scale, population-based evidence on the associations between different PA intensities and NHHR. Regular moderate-to-vigorous PA is associated with more favorable lipid profiles and lower mortality risk. These findings highlight NHHR as a valuable biomarker linking physical activity to cardiometabolic health and longevity in middle-aged and older adults.
γδ T cell-stromal networks modulate matrix composition and vascularity in foreign body response
Immune-stromal crosstalk governs tissue fibrosis, which is marked by dysregulated extracellular matrix (ECM) production and aberrant vasculature. Here, we investigate how γδ T cell interactions with stromal cells shape fibrosis in the foreign body response in a murine biomaterial implant model. During the acute reaction, type-1 (γδIFNγ) and type-17 (γδ17) γδ T cell subsets accumulate at the implant site. While γδIFNγ cells decrease as fibrosis progresses, activated γδ17 cells persist as dominant...
Oral microbiome signatures predict biological age and host health
Identifying robust, non-invasive biomarkers of biological age is key to preventive medicine. While gut aging clocks exist, the oral microbiome remains underexplored as a quantitative biomarker. Using oral microbiome data from two NHANES cohorts (N = 4,675), we identified 64 age-dependent bacterial genera and developed a machine learning model predicting chronological age, with generalizability in an independent external cohort (N = 1,293). We derived an Oral Microbiome Aging Acceleration (OMAA)...
Immunological impact of age and comorbidities: findings from the REALISM and SENIOR-HLA-DR cohorts
BACKGROUND: The ageing population faces numerous physiological changes, among which immunosenescence plays a central role. Understanding the mechanisms underlying immunosenescence remains a priority. Within this framework, the contribution of comorbidities to immune dysfunction is still poorly characterized, despite growing evidence suggesting that it may represent a critical determinant in the evaluation of immunosenescence. The main objective of this report was to disentangle the respective...
Redox rhythms promote fitness by modulating ageing-dependent reprogramming
Ageing leads to diurnal misalignment with a global reduction in physiological fitness, yet the mechanisms underlying such age-related diurnal reprogramming and its role in ageing remain poorly understood. Here we generate diurnal transcriptomes across eight peripheral tissues and reveal that disrupted redox oscillations are common diurnal alterations in organismal ageing. Restoring redox rhythms through the time-restricted application of antioxidants and pro-oxidants markedly improved glucose...
Organellar insights in ageing and longevity
Metabolic processes shape ageing and longevity at multiple levels. Emerging evidence shows that many of these processes are orchestrated within and between cellular organelles. Organelles function not only as metabolic reactors but also as signalling hubs, and their coordination plays crucial roles in maintaining cellular homeostasis and promoting organismal fitness. Rather than acting in isolation, organelles engage in dynamic crosstalk through membrane contact sites, metabolite exchange and...
Interactions between rare variants in DNA repair genes and cardiometabolic risk explain more variability in cognitive function
The brain is vulnerable to DNA damage and cardiometabolic risk. Yet, whether genetic variation in DNA repair interacts with cardiometabolic factors to explain cognitive variability remains unclear. Participants (n = 376,533) of white-British ancestry from the UK biobank with cognitive, neuroimaging, and whole-exome sequencing data were included. Six cognitive outcomes were assessed: fluid intelligence (FIQ), symbol-digit matching task (SDMT), visual matching (MATCH), trail making (TRAIL1 and...
Study protocol for a randomized, parallel-group trial to compare the effectiveness of registered dietitian and occupational therapy services on fall risk among home-delivered meal recipients
No abstract
Zfp462 Is a Key Mediator of Osteoblast Differentiation and Might Contribute to Age-Related Bone Loss
Senile osteoporosis is characterized by a progressive decline in bone formation. Our study identifies Zfp462/ZNF462 as a novel regulator of osteoblast differentiation, providing new mechanistic insights into the aging-related change in bone formation. Here, we demonstrate that ZNF462, MOZ, and RUNX2 physically interact with each other and promote osteoblastic bone formation by increasing RUNX2 activity and histone H3 acetylation. Importantly, we reveal that aging decreases ZNF462 expression in...
Telomerase Knockout in Myeloid Cells Predisposes Mice to Foam Cell Formation, Dyslipidemia, Lung Fibrosis, and Cardiac Dysfunction
Aging-associated changes in myeloid cells are incompletely understood. One of the culprits of aging is the downregulation of the Tert gene coding for the catalytic subunit of telomerase. Studies of mouse models with Tert knockout (KO) in specific cells have revealed the importance of the telomere-independent noncanonical function of TERT in supporting mitochondrial metabolism and protection from cell senescence. To investigate the role of TERT in myeloid cells (MCs), we analyzed mice with Tert...
Global scale-free brain activity as a potential neural signature of visual information processing in aging
INTRODUCTION: Confluent evidence suggests that aging is associated with a reduction in the spectral slope of neural recordings. This phenomenon has been hypothesized to reflect an increase in the ratio of excitatory and inhibitory (E/I) balance. As neural E/I ratio is considered essential for cognitive functioning, this study investigated whether spectral slope (β) predicts cognitive performance in the older adults and could serve as a potential neural signature of cognitive aging. Nevertheless,...
Stem cell control in the lung by an autocrine injury-activated Igf complex
Stem cells proliferate after injury to repair damaged tissue, and chronic injury can promote cancer. However, the injury-activated signals and regulatory mechanisms, and their relationship to cancer, are poorly understood. Here, we identified insulin-like growth factor 2 (Igf2) as an injury-activated mitogen for lung neuroendocrine stem cells, which are facultative airway progenitors and a cell of origin of small-cell lung cancer in mice. Igf2 was constitutively produced by the stem cells but...
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