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Tubulin prevents toxic brain protein clumps linked to Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s

8 hours 58 minutes ago
Scientists at Baylor College of Medicine may have uncovered a promising new way to combat Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. Instead of trying to stop Tau and alpha-synuclein proteins from gathering into tiny droplets inside brain cells, the researchers found that tubulin—the protein that builds the cell’s internal transport network—can redirect these proteins away from forming toxic clumps and toward healthy, productive work.

Yale study finds nearly half of older adults improved with age

12 hours 4 minutes ago
A long-term Yale study is challenging one of the biggest myths about aging. Nearly half of adults over 65 improved physically, mentally, or both over time, despite the common belief that aging means constant decline. Researchers found that people with more positive attitudes about getting older were significantly more likely to show these gains.

Scientists discover neurons must break their DNA to build the brain

15 hours 36 minutes ago
As newborn neurons make their way through the developing brain, they must squeeze through incredibly tight spaces to reach their final destinations. Researchers discovered that this physical journey routinely causes some of the most severe forms of DNA damage—double-strand breaks—yet the young brain has evolved an impressive ability to repair the damage almost immediately.

Major review finds vaping likely causes lung and oral cancer

16 hours 40 minutes ago
Researchers have concluded that nicotine vapes are likely to cause lung and oral cancers, based on evidence ranging from human biomarkers to animal and laboratory studies. The findings challenge the idea that vaping is a harmless alternative to smoking and suggest health risks may be emerging much sooner than many expected.

Scientists found a cannabis compound that relieves pain without the high

1 day 6 hours ago
Compounds responsible for the aroma of cannabis and many other plants may offer a surprising new way to relieve chronic pain. Researchers found that several cannabis-derived terpenes significantly reduced pain in mouse models of fibromyalgia and post-surgical pain, with one terpene, geraniol, showing especially strong effects. Unlike THC, these compounds are not associated with psychoactive effects, making them a potentially attractive alternative for pain treatment.

This DNA repair gene went rogue and exposed a cancer weakness

1 day 9 hours ago
Scientists have discovered that a gene normally considered a DNA-protecting "good guy" can become dangerous when cells make too much of it. The gene, EXO1, acts like molecular scissors that help repair DNA, but when overproduced it starts cutting DNA it shouldn't, creating damage linked to cancer.

Molecular crosstalk between MAPK signaling and neuroprotective pathways in Parkinson's disease: from pathogenesis to therapeutic potential

2 days 12 hours ago
Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling is increasingly recognized as a central regulator in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). PD is a chronic neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc), driven by a complex interplay of mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and neuroinflammation. While basal MAPK activity is essential for neuroprotection and neuronal growth, its overactivation,...
Manar G Shalabi

Disruption of the brain-spleen axis impairs monocyte-microglia communication and accelerates disease progression in a mouse model of amyloidosis

2 days 12 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by a prolonged asymptomatic phase before cognitive decline emerges, yet the mechanisms driving symptom onset remain unclear. Here, we hypothesized that the transition from asymptomatic to symptomatic disease is linked to dysfunction of brain-immune communication. Retrograde neuronal tracing in the 5xFAD mouse model of amyloidosis reveals reduced brain-spleen connectivity at advanced disease stages. To probe the functional role of the brain-spleen axis in...
Tommaso Croese

Single-cell profiling of DNA methylation in autism spectrum disorder prefrontal cortex reveals distinct regulatory and aging signatures

2 days 12 hours ago
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a heterogeneous neurodevelopmental condition. Studies of postmortem ASD brain tissue have revealed convergent molecular changes across the cortex. Whether these features are reflected in cell-type-specific epigenetic signatures is unknown. Here, we present a single-cell analysis of DNA methylation (DNAm) coupled with transcriptomics in ASD. Using snmCT-seq, we profiled DNAm and transcript levels from over 60,000 nuclei derived from the prefrontal cortex of 49...
Katherine W Eyring

Why We Age - Integrating Error, Program, and Selective Pressure

2 days 12 hours ago
Whether aging arises primarily from the progressive accumulation of molecular damage (error-based theories) or from regulated, development-related processes (programmatic theories) has been debated for more than a century. This question is central to aging research and shapes our conceptual understanding of aging. Although the existence of a dedicated aging program and the evolutionary advantage of aging remains controversial, the possibility that aging confers adaptive benefits at the species...
Wolfgang Wagner

Circulating Extracellular Vesicles as Systemic Mediators of Cardiac Aging: Mechanisms, Biomarkers, and Therapeutic Perspectives

2 days 12 hours ago
Cardiac aging is a fundamental contributor to heart failure, arrhythmias, impaired stress tolerance, and reduced cardiovascular resilience in the elderly. While intrinsic myocardial aging has been widely examined, the systemic mechanisms driving age-related cardiac decline are not fully understood. Circulating extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as key mediators of intercellular and inter-organ communication, transferring proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids that modify the phenotypes of...
Chan Zhang

Caregiver Availability and Racial Differences in End-Of-Life Care Quality: Evidence From the National Health and Aging Trends Study 2017-2024

2 days 12 hours ago
CONCLUSIONS: Black older adults without caregivers had the worst observed EOL care quality. Caregiver presence was associated with narrower but persistent racial differences, suggesting structural factors that may attenuate the benefits of caregiving for Black older adults. Policy interventions designed to provide culturally responsive support to minority caregivers may help reduce racial disparities in EOL care quality.
Yusheng Jia

Structure of the NAT10 acetyltransferase and mechanism of tRNA acetylation

2 days 12 hours ago
NAT10 is the sole eukaryotic acetyltransferase that catalyzes N4-acetylcytidine (ac⁴C) modification of RNA. While dysregulation of NAT10 is associated with cancer and premature aging syndromes, the requirement for its acetyltransferase activity and how NAT10 coordinates catalysis and RNA binding remain poorly understood. Here, we report single particle cryo-electron microscopy structures of eukaryotic (Chaetomium thermophilum) NAT10 in complex with a designer cytidine-CoA cofactor-based ligand...
Mingyang Zhou

Frontotemporal dementia associated CHCHD10<sup>V57E</sup> mutation aggravates tau pathology via disrupting the CHCHD10-Rab7A-TBC1D15 complex

2 days 12 hours ago
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD), a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by early-onset cognitive decline, includes two major pathologic types: FTD-Tau and FTD-TDP. Coiled-coil-helix-coiled-coil-helix domain containing 10 (CHCHD10) encodes a mitochondrial protein, and the CHCHD10^(V57E) variant is a novel mutation clinically identified in FTD patients. The role of CHCHD10 mutants in the pathogenesis of FTD-TDP has been largely reported. However, whether CHCHD10 variants impact the FTD-tau...
Jie Sheng

Immunosenescence in systemic and multi-organ aging: mechanisms, inter-organ crosstalk, and translational opportunities

2 days 12 hours ago
Aging is increasingly viewed as an organism-wide process marked by systemic decline and multimorbidity. This Review frames immunosenescence as a context-dependent mediator, amplifier, or consequence of multi-organ dysfunction, integrating niche-centered mechanisms, bidirectional immune-organ interactions, innate-adaptive remodeling, immune-tissue axes, and multidimensional biomarkers. We also highlight current limitations, including context heterogeneity and unresolved causality, and discuss...
Zhi-Guo Wu