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Oligodendrocyte Dysfunction in Alzheimer's Disease: Integrating Spatial Epigenomics and Metabolic Circuitry in Demyelination - A Critical Review

1 day ago
Traditional Alzheimer's disease (AD) research has predominantly focused on neuronal pathology within the amyloid-tau-neurodegeneration (ATN) framework, emphasizing β-amyloid (Aβ) plaques, neurofibrillary tangles (NFTS), and neuroinflammation as primary drivers of disease progression. Recently, converging evidence suggests that oligodendrocytes (OLs) and myelin abnormalities are not merely downstream consequences of neuronal injury. Instead, OL dysfunction may emerge early and actively shape...
Lian Jian

Meet the author: Junyue Cao

1 day ago
In this meet-the-author Q&A, Scientific Editor Sara Rohban and Editor-in-Chief Laura Zahn speak with Junyue Cao about his Cell Genomics paper. He discusses his ambitions to study aging and how his newly developed method, EnrichSci, was used to look at changes over time in oligodendrocytes in the brain.
Junyue Cao

Vitamin C inhibits ACSL4 to alleviate ferro-aging in primates

1 day ago
Aging is associated with oxidative stress, but specific druggable pathways remain elusive. Here, we define a conserved iron-lipid axis driving primate aging, termed "ferro-aging." Multi-tissue profiling in humans and non-human primates reveals age-progressive iron accumulation, fueling chronic lipid peroxidation orchestrated by acyl-coenzyme A (CoA) synthetase long-chain family member 4 (ACSL4). Distinct from acute ferroptosis, this ACSL4-mediated process promotes cellular senescence and...
Lixiao Liu

Cell-type-specific transposon demethylation and TAD remodeling in aging mouse brain

1 day ago
Aging is a major risk factor for neurodegenerative diseases, yet the underlying epigenetic mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we generated a comprehensive single-nucleus cell atlas of brain aging across multiple brain regions, comprising 132,551 single-cell methylomes and 72,666 joint chromatin conformation-methylome nuclei. Integration with companion transcriptomic and chromatin accessibility data yielded a cross-modality taxonomy of 36 major cell types. We observed that transposable element (TE)...
Qiurui Zeng

Pluripotent stem-cell-based screening uncovers sildenafil as a mitochondrial disease therapy

1 day ago
Mitochondrial disease encompasses inherited disorders affecting mitochondrial function. A severe and untreatable form of mitochondrial disease is Leigh syndrome (LS), causing psychomotor regression and metabolic crises. To accelerate drug discovery for LS, we screen a library of 5,632 repurposable compounds in neural cells from LS-patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). We identify phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) inhibitors as leads and prioritize sildenafil for its clinical...
Annika Zink

Renal inflammaging: Mechanisms, pathophysiology and therapeutic prospects

1 day ago
The ageing global population faces a rising prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD), now recognized as a state of accelerated ageing driven by chronic low-grade inflammation-inflammaging. This review synthesizes current evidence positioning the kidney not merely as a passive target but as an active participant in systemic inflammaging, a process fueled by immunosenescence, metabolic reprogramming, and cellular senescence. We explore how resident renal cells, including tubular epithelial...
Jing Yan

Span capacity and age-related differences in prefrontal functional organization during visual discrimination

1 day ago
Aging alters prefrontal recruitment, often showing posterior-anterior shifts that may reflect compensatory mechanisms. Working memory capacity (WMC) is a key individual difference shaping attention and control but its role in age-related functional reorganization remains unclear. We examined 72 adults (36 younger, 36 older) who completed standardized span tasks and an fMRI visual discrimination paradigm with three manipulations: perceptual load, fine discrimination, and mapping-switch....
Zai-Fu Yao

Translocation of bacteria from the gut to the brain in mice

1 day ago
Recent advances suggest a correlation between gut dysbiosis and neurological diseases, however, relatively little is known about how gut bacteria impact the brain. Here, we reveal that bacteria can translocate directly from the gut to the brain in small numbers when mice are fed an atherogenic, high-fat diet (Paigen diet) that causes alterations in gut microbiome composition and gut barrier permeability. The bacteria were not found in other systemic sites or the blood, but were detected in the...
Manoj Thapa

Cortisol treatment impairs path integration and alters grid-like representations in the male human entorhinal cortex

1 day ago
Acute stress triggers the release of cortisol, which broadly affects cognitive processes. Path integration, a specific navigational process, relies heavily on grid cells in the entorhinal cortex. The entorhinal cortex contains glucocorticoid receptors and is therefore likely to be influenced by cortisol, though little is known about this relationship. Given the role of the entorhinal cortex in neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease, investigating the effects of cortisol on this brain...
Osman Akan

Sensorimotor postural training induces multi-level cortical network reorganization in older adults enhancing efficiency and resilience

1 day ago
Balance training in geriatric rehabilitation reduces fall risk by eliciting multifaceted cortical reorganization through repeated sensorimotor challenges, supporting more efficient postural control in aging. This study combined minimum spanning tree (MST) and k-iteration second-best MST analyses to characterize training-induced changes in cortical network efficiency and resilience. Twenty-four older adults (70.4 ± 3.3 years) completed 12 sessions of stabilometer training with real-time visual...
Yi-Ching Chen

Single-cell transcriptional and epigenomic landscape of human blood immune cells across the lifespan

1 day ago
The dynamic changes in immune cell composition throughout the human lifespan remain poorly understood. Here, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing and single-cell assay for transposase-accessible chromatin sequencing on peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy donors, spanning mid-fetal to late adulthood. Our findings revealed age-associated reprogramming across lymphoid and myeloid lineages, with T cells undergoing the most significant transcriptional remodeling. Notably,...
Beibei Huang

Lifelong behavioral screen reveals an architecture of vertebrate aging

1 day ago
Mapping behavior of individual vertebrate animals across lifespan could provide an unprecedented view into the lifelong process of aging. We created a platform for high-resolution continuous behavioral tracking of the African killifish across natural lifespan from adolescence to death. We found that animals follow distinct individual aging trajectories. The behaviors of long-lived animals differed markedly from those of short-lived animals, even relatively early in life, and were linked to...
Claire N Bedbrook

Rapid and sensitive detection of cancer-derived small extracellular vesicles using Janus particles

1 day ago
Detecting small extracellular vesicles is critical for understanding disease biology and developing diagnostic tools, yet current methods require lengthy isolation steps and lack sensitivity owing to interference from abundant proteins. Here we report on an assay that uses Janus particles that enable rapid, isolation-free detection by exploiting Brownian rotation-induced blinking changes. When vesicles bind, their size significantly alters the blinking frequency, while smaller proteins produce...
Sonu Kumar

Blood phosphorylated tau elevation as a biomarker in immunoglobulin light chain and transthyretin amyloidosis

1 day ago
Elevated blood levels of phosphorylated tau (p-tau) are diagnostic of Alzheimer disease and are associated with the deposition of amyloid-β in the cerebral neuropil. Elevated p-tau levels have also been associated with cerebral deposition of Danish amyloid and prion protein amyloid. Here we analyzed p-tau in serum from four different cohorts of people with the most common types of systemic amyloidosis, transthyretin (ATTR) amyloidosis and immunoglobulin light chain (AL) amyloidosis. We found...
Stephan A Kaeser

Microglia protein profiles in CSF across Alzheimer's disease clinical stages

1 day ago
Microglia are implicated in the progression of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology from its earliest stages, suggesting that cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) microglia profiling across clinical AD stages can aid in treatment development and monitoring. We analyzed two CSF cohorts (n = 834) that span from unimpaired controls to preclinical and dementia AD stages, identifying 109 dysregulated microglia-related proteins. Enrichment analyses revealed innate immune processes and cellular recruitment in...
Elena-Raluca Blujdea

Stroke in persistent chronic kidney disease condition alters innate-immunity to escalate mitochondrial dysfunction and aging

1 day ago
Stroke is one of the leading causes of mortality and disability worldwide, with ischemic stroke accounting for over 87% of all stroke cases. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is one of the major risk factors for stroke, as CKD patients have shown evidence of impaired cerebral autoregulation leading to exacerbated stroke pathology. The worsening of stroke outcomes in CKD patients is limitedly understood. Inflammation plays a pivotal role in driving the CKD-stroke pathology. The cGAS-STING (cyclic...
Aishika Datta

Intrinsic capacity and stroke risk in a multiple cohort study

1 day ago
Intrinsic capacity is a concept established by the World Health Organization (WHO). The concept aims to represent the total of a person's physical and mental abilities, measured across five domains: cognition, psychological, sensory, vitality, and locomotor that were identified as crucial for healthy aging. The aim being to shift focus from disease to function to predict health, disability, and frailty. In this large-scale cohort study, we aim to investigate the association between intrinsic...
Ying Li

Intestinal interoceptive dysfunction drives age-associated cognitive decline

1 day ago
Ageing is accompanied by declining memory function, with extremely heterogeneous manifestation in the human population¹. Brain-extrinsic factors influencing cognitive decline, such as gastrointestinal signals, have emerged as attractive targets for peripheral interventions^(2-6), but the underlying mechanisms remain largely unclear. Here, by charting a high-resolution map of microbiome ageing and its functional consequences throughout the lifespan of mice, we identify a mechanism by which...
Timothy O Cox