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The forgotten organ that could predict how long you live
A long-overlooked organ may hold surprising clues to healthy aging and cancer survival. Researchers at Mass General Brigham used AI to analyze CT scans from tens of thousands of adults and found that people with healthier thymuses—a small immune-system organ once thought to become largely irrelevant after childhood—lived longer and had substantially lower risks of heart disease, cancer, and death.
Obesity doesn’t equate to ill health: why the ‘disease’ label doesn’t always fit
Poor supervision is pushing young researchers out of academia
Robust projections of risks to the Amazon rainforest
Why it’s time to bin recommendation letters in science job applications
Science fiction: nine lab-life novels for your holiday reading
How long can humans live? We simply don’t know
Can Polymarket predict the progress of science, or are subject-experts better?
Scientists found the hidden switch fueling alzheimer’s brain inflammation
Scientists at Scripps Research have uncovered a molecular “switch” that appears to fuel the damaging brain inflammation seen in Alzheimer’s disease. They found that a protein called STING becomes chemically altered in a way that keeps the brain’s immune system stuck in overdrive, harming the connections between nerve cells.
Why cancer spreads more in middle age than in old age
Melanoma may not become steadily more dangerous with age as scientists once assumed. In a surprising discovery, researchers found that cancer spread was lowest in young mice, surged in middle-aged mice, and then dropped again in very old mice. The key appears to be a special type of immune cell that helps keep cancer dormant and prevents it from spreading.
Multimorbidity as a predictor of mortality in companion dogs
Multimorbidity, the presence of two or more conditions, is associated with a higher risk of death as individuals age. However, modeling multimorbidity in laboratory animals is difficult, if not impossible, because specific conditions are seldom individually diagnosed and treated in these settings. Because of their shared environment, physiology, and genetic diversity, and because they are medically managed as individuals, companion dogs have potential to serve as a translational multimorbidity...
AI-Driven discovery of brain-penetrant mTOR-independent autophagy enhancers for Alzheimer's disease
Current Alzheimer's disease therapies offer limited efficacy and are often accompanied by significant side effects, underscoring the urgent need for new treatment strategies. Enhancing autophagy represents a promising therapeutic approach, yet most known autophagy inducers act through the mTOR-dependent pathway, which broadly affects cellular metabolism and proliferation, and their clinical potential is further limited by poor blood-brain barrier (BBB) penetration. To address these twin...
Liver Aging Index: A Noninvasive Score for Liver Biological Aging and Liver-Related Outcomes in Multicohorts
Biological aging is a key determinant of liver disease and mortality, but there is little evidence on noninvasive index for assessment of liver biological aging. We developed the Liver Aging Index (LAI) in the China Kadoorie Biobank (CKB, N = 21,629) using Cox-Gompertz proportional hazards model. The LAI incorporated three clinical factors (body mass index, systolic and diastolic blood pressure), eight plasma biomarkers (glucose, total cholesterol, triglycerides, high- and low-density...
Intermittent fasting triggers surprising changes in the brain
Losing weight may involve rewiring the gut and the brain at the same time. In a study of obese adults, an intermittent fasting-style diet led to significant weight loss, healthier metabolic markers, and notable shifts in gut bacteria. Brain scans also revealed changes in regions tied to appetite, cravings, and self-control. The results suggest the gut microbiome and brain may work together to influence weight-loss success.
Omega-3 fish oil shows promise against type 2 diabetes
A new study suggests fish oil may help reduce insulin resistance even in people who aren't obese. In diabetic rats, omega-3 supplementation improved blood sugar levels, cholesterol, and inflammation by shifting immune cells into a more anti-inflammatory mode.
Locus-specific LINE-1 mRNA expression reflects cell-type- and stimulus-specific senescence states
Long Interspersed Element-1 (L1) causes DNA damage and inflammation, which are hallmarks of cellular senescence. To understand the role of endogenous L1 in senescence, accurate detection and measurement of L1 messenger RNA (mRNA) expression changes during this process is crucial, as L1 transcription is the prerequisite step of L1-related downstream effects. We developed an automated bioinformatics pipeline to quantify locus-level L1 mRNA expression in ex vivo and in vitro models of normal and...
Essentialist Beliefs About Aging Moderate the Link Between Physical Functioning and Subjective Well-Being in Geriatric Sample of Older Adults
This study tests the moderating role of essentialist beliefs about aging (i.e., perceptions of aging as a fixed versus malleable process) in the relationship between physical functioning and subjective well-being distinguishing between a) overall quality of life and b) health satisfaction among older adults in clinical care. We propose that essentialist beliefs serve as adaptive, palliative cognitions that help maintain high subjective well-being despite health challenges. In a sample of...
Early-life social enrichment induces divergent cognitive-emotional aging along with dorsal hippocampal VGluT1 and glial alterations
Early-life experiences can exert lasting impacts on brain function. While previous research has largely focused on early-life adversity, the long-term consequences of early-life enrichment on the aging brain remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the behavioral and molecular effects of communal nesting (CN, a model of early social enrichment, during postnatal day 2-9) in aged male mice. Behaviorally, CN-exposed mice preserved hippocampus-dependent recognition memory but...
Diffusion abnormalities associated with brain arteriolosclerosis: An in-vivo MRI and pathology study in community-based older adults
Brain arteriolosclerosis, a primary pathology of cerebral small vessel disease, is common in older adults and is associated with lower cognitive and motor function and higher odds of dementia. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that arteriolosclerosis is associated with lower diffusion anisotropy and higher trace of the diffusion tensor in white matter, independently of other age-related neuropathologies and visible white matter hyperintensities (WMH). In-vivo diffusion MRI and...
Effects of elastic band training versus free weight training in community-dwelling older adults: A randomized controlled trial
CONCLUSION: The findings of this study suggest that resistance training adaptations exhibit high task specificity in older adults, and significant improvements in functional outcomes can be achieved with elastic bands.