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Popular sugar substitutes linked to faster brain aging

5 hours 25 minutes ago
Several popular sugar substitutes may not be as harmless as they seem. Adults who consumed the most artificial sweeteners showed substantially faster declines in memory and thinking, especially if they were under 60 or had diabetes. The highest intake was linked to cognitive aging roughly 1.6 years faster than the lowest intake. Researchers stressed that more studies are needed before concluding that sweeteners are the cause.

Intermittent fasting helped people keep weight off for a year

7 hours 22 minutes ago
A 12-week intermittent fasting program produced weight-loss benefits that were still visible a year later. Participants who ate within an eight-hour window maintained more weight loss than those who followed their usual longer eating schedule. Both early and late eating windows worked, while early fasting appeared especially helpful for preserving fat loss.

Sibling Disconnectedness in Midlife and Cognitive Functioning in Later Life: Is Loneliness an Explanatory Factor?

9 hours 21 minutes ago
ObjectivesSibling ties are among the most enduring of all social relationships, so the loss or absence of this long-standing bond may undermine the well-being of older adults. This study examined whether and how disconnectedness from adult siblings (i.e., no contacts/interactions and emotional distance) is linked to older adults' cognitive functioning.MethodsWe use data from four waves of the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (1993-2020) and structural equation models to prospectively evaluate the...
Gina Lee

Mediterranean diet may activate tiny proteins that protect the heart and brain

16 hours 57 minutes ago
The Mediterranean diet may influence aging through tiny proteins produced inside the cell’s mitochondria. Older adults who followed the diet most closely had higher levels of humanin and SHMOOSE, which have been linked to heart and brain protection. Olive oil, fish, legumes, and fewer refined carbohydrates appeared especially important. The findings could eventually help scientists develop more personalized nutrition plans for healthy aging.

Tiny plastics in drinking water may be making dangerous bacteria stronger

1 day 6 hours ago
Tiny plastic particles in drinking water may be doing more than contaminating the environment. New research suggests nanoplastics can actually help harmful bacteria survive by strengthening the slimy biofilms they form inside water systems. These tougher biofilms become more resistant to disinfectants, making them harder to remove and potentially increasing public health risks.

Your fingers may hold a secret of human brain evolution

1 day 7 hours ago
A study of 225 newborns suggests prenatal estrogen may have played a role in the evolution of larger human brains. Boys with finger-length patterns linked to higher estrogen exposure before birth tended to have larger head circumferences, which are strongly associated with brain size. The same connection was not seen in girls.

Targeting Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration in Parkinson's Disease: Emerging Natural and Synthetic Therapeutic Strategies

1 day 9 hours ago
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative disorder worldwide. It is associated with the ongoing degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra and the formation of Lewy bodies that contain α-synuclein. These pathological changes lead to abnormalities of motor symptoms (tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia) and non-motor symptoms (cognitive decline, sleep abnormalities, psychiatric abnormalities). The pathogenesis of PD is complex and multifactorial,...
Safia Arbab

Air-Liquid interface midbrain organoids model the pathological features of Parkinson's disease

1 day 9 hours ago
Human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived midbrain organoids offer a promising platform for modeling Parkinson's disease (PD). Yet, their utility has been limited by the absence of microglia and the development of a necrotic core during maturation. Here, we present an air-liquid interface (ALI) slice culture system for extended cultivation of midbrain organoids (mORGs), enabling efficient microglial integration, improved neuronal viability, and enhanced functional maturation. Compared with...
Sara Kälvälä

From neural loss to regeneration: modulating cell death to enhance pluripotent stem cell graft survival and integration

1 day 9 hours ago
Cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative diseases rank among the leading causes of death worldwide and represent an increasing socioeconomic burden, particularly in aging populations. Pluripotent stem cell (PSC)-based therapies have emerged as promising strategies for replacing lost neurons and restoring neural circuits in disorders of the central nervous system (CNS). However, major barriers remain, including poor survival, limited integration, and variable functional maturation of transplanted...
Ouye Chen

CD33 and clusterin interact biophysically and genetically to modulate Alzheimer risk

1 day 9 hours ago
Mechanisms linking CD33 variants to Alzheimer Disease (AD) are poorly defined. Here, we combine structural, cellular, and genetic analyses to delineate how the CD33^(M) splice isoform, upregulated in carriers of CD33 risk alleles, modulates microglial function. We show that CD33^(M) ectodomain dimerizes, enabling binding of large multi-sialylated molecules. We demonstrate that another AD risk protein - clusterin (CLU) ± Aβ oligomers (but not ApoE) binds with nanomolar avidity to CD33^(M), but...
Roger B Dodd

Skin-innervating glutamatergic neurons modulate aging

1 day 9 hours ago
Peripheral nerves regulate skin homeostasis by secreting neurotransmitters, but their role during skin aging remains incompletely understood. Here, we report that cutaneous denervation accelerates skin aging, as evidenced by collagen reduction. Neurofilament heavy chain (Nefh) is decreased in aged skin and is predominantly expressed in vesicular glutamate transporter 2-positive (Vglut2^(+)) skin-innervating glutamatergic neurons. Notably, dermal fibroblasts, the primary producers of collagen,...
Zhikai Wang

Foundation model reveals the shared organization of transcription and topologically associating domains

1 day 9 hours ago
The three-dimensional organization of chromatin into topologically associating domains (TADs) may impact gene regulation by bringing distant genes into contact. However, studies of TADs' function and their influence on transcription have been constrained by ambiguities in TAD boundary definitions and challenges in directly measuring their regulatory effects. We overcome these limitations by developing species-level consensus TAD maps for human and mouse by using a bag-of-genes approach that...
Huan Liang

Palmitoylation in Cardiovascular Aging and Disease: Mechanistic Insights and Therapeutic Opportunities

1 day 9 hours ago
Cardiovascular aging is a major contributor to the development of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), yet the mechanisms linking metabolic imbalance to age-related cardiovascular dysfunction remain unclear. Protein palmitoylation, a reversible lipid post-translational modification, regulates protein localization, stability, and signaling, but its role in cardiovascular aging has not been systematically defined. Importantly, protein palmitoylation appears to act as a double-edged sword: whereas its...
Yuhao Song

Metabolic adaptations of the tumor macroenvironment and their role in cancer progression and survivorship

1 day 9 hours ago
Cancer progression is shaped not only by tumor-intrinsic programs and the local microenvironment but also by profound metabolic rewiring of the host at the organismal scale. Tumors engage in dynamic cross-talk with distant organs, immune and neuroendocrine networks, and systemic nutrient pools, generating a metabolically permissive macroenvironment that fuels tumor growth, supports metastatic dissemination, and undermines therapeutic efficacy. In this review, we synthesize emerging evidence...
Devesh Raizada

LARS regulates cellular senescence and autophagy in liver cancer cells

1 day 9 hours ago
Human cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LARS) is known to catalyze the ligation of leucine to tRNA^(Leu) during protein biosynthesis. However, LARS also acts as a nutrient sensor in a non-canonical activity to regulate cell growth. In this investigation, LARS was determined to be expressed at high levels in human liver cancer, which correlated with poor clinical outcomes in patients. Knockdown of LARS in HepG2 liver cancer cells suppressed cell proliferation and growth, yet promoted cell...
Xiaodan Lin

From neural loss to regeneration: modulating cell death to enhance pluripotent stem cell graft survival and integration

1 day 9 hours ago
Cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative diseases rank among the leading causes of death worldwide and represent an increasing socioeconomic burden, particularly in aging populations. Pluripotent stem cell (PSC)-based therapies have emerged as promising strategies for replacing lost neurons and restoring neural circuits in disorders of the central nervous system (CNS). However, major barriers remain, including poor survival, limited integration, and variable functional maturation of transplanted...
Ouye Chen

Glycerol metabolism triggers trypanosome differentiation into transmissible forms in mammalian tissue-like conditions

1 day 9 hours ago
In the mammalian host, Trypanosoma brucei proliferates as slender bloodstream forms before undergoing quorum-sensing (QS)-dependent differentiation into non-dividing transmissible stumpy-QS forms, a process that both controls parasitaemia and enables transmission to the tsetse fly. However, this model does not explain how transmission occurs in chronically infected patients and cattle, where parasite densities are often too low to trigger QS-mediated differentiation. We identify a relevant...
Mohammad El Kadri

Systemic mapping of senescence characteristics across septic tissues

1 day 9 hours ago
Sepsis triggers profound organism-wide disturbances, yet the cellular logic underlying its systemic impact remains poorly defined. By integrating single-cell transcriptomes from six septic tissues, we uncovered a conserved cross-tissue program characterized by inflammation-driven senescence, disrupted intercellular communication, and coordinated transcriptional reprogramming. Senescence signatures were broadly elevated across cell types and strongly coupled to altered communication networks,...
Chen Zhou

Nutrient and non-nutrient regulators of insulin secretion

1 day 9 hours ago
Regulation of insulin secretion by pancreatic β-cells is central to maintaining glucose homeostasis and overall metabolic health. Glucose is recognized as the major driver of insulin secretion; however, here, we highlight established and emerging evidence of important contributions of other nutrients, including amino acids, fatty acids and alternative fuels, as well as non-nutrient factors, in modulating both basal and postprandial insulin release. We discuss molecular mechanisms underlying...
Jelena Kolic