Aggregator
Alzheimer’s drug developers accuse clinical trial sites of faking data
T3D Therapeutics alleges that contract researchers delivered "medically impossible" results on its candidate drug
Fossils point to common ancestor of modern humans, Neanderthals
Bones from a Moroccan quarry belonged to a hominin that lived when the human lineage was splitting
Why a fatal ‘black fungus’ struck India during the COVID-19 pandemic
Mucormycosis may be triggered by low levels of albumin, the most common blood protein
Cognitive Reserve and Its Relationship With Memory Changes: An Analysis of the Survey of Health, Aging, and Retirement in Europe (SHARE)
CONCLUSIONS: CR-related proxies were strong predictors of memory performance over the 9-year period, particularly for delayed recall. These findings reflect sociobehavioural influences associated with CR development, rather than direct evidence of CR as a neurofunctional mechanism. Promoting cognitively, socially and physically enriching activities, together with addressing depression, may help preserve memory function in aging populations.
Age-Associated Dysregulation of Postsynaptic Mitochondria Perturbs Reinnervation Kinetics
Age-associated degeneration of neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) contributes to sarcopenia and motor function decline, yet the mechanisms that drive this dysfunction in aging remain poorly defined. Here, we demonstrate that postsynaptic mitochondria are significantly diminished in quantity in old-aged skeletal muscle, correlating with increased denervation and delayed reinnervation following nerve injury. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing before and after sciatic nerve crush from young and old-aged...
Green Spaces and Health Outcomes in Older Adults: A Bibliometric Analysis
CONCLUSION: The findings emphasize the need for policy-driven urban planning that not only prioritizes green space accessibility but also addresses equity and supports healthy aging.
A Machine-Learning Model of Chronological Age Based on Routine Blood Biomarkers in a Central European Population: A Potential Biological Age Marker
CONCLUSION: Using easily accessible blood biomarkers, it is possible to estimate chronological age with an MAE of 8.73 years in a large Central European population. Because the present work does not include validation against clinical outcomes, the resulting index should be regarded as a potential biological age marker. Future studies are needed to test its association with morbidity, mortality, and established biological age measures in independent cohorts.
Targeting NRF2 With Isoeugenol: A Promising Small Molecule for Neurodegenerative, Metabolic, and Chronic Inflammatory Disorders
Oxidative stress, driven by an imbalance between oxidants and antioxidants, disrupts redox homeostasis and contributes to the development of chronic diseases, including cancer, diabetes, neurodegenerative disorders, and aging. The NRF2-KEAP1 pathway is a pivotal cellular defense mechanism against oxidative stress, regulating the transcription of cytoprotective genes. Pharmacological NRF2 activation has emerged as a promising strategy to mitigate oxidative stress-related pathologies; however,...
‘I rarely get outside’: scientists ditch fieldwork in the age of AI
A timeline of structural and functional consequences to ipRGCs in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that affects cognitive, sensory and motor systems, including the visual system and has a significant impact on autonomy and quality of life. Emerging evidence suggests that visual system abnormalities may enable early detection and monitoring for AD, appearing before cognitive symptoms. Intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs or mRGCs) are among the first neurons affected in AD. This study investigates the...
Accelerated Cognitive Decline in Pain-Insomnia-Depression Syndrome: Longitudinal Evidence and Protective Effects of Healthy Lifestyles
CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS: PIDS and higher cumulative symptom load are associated with accelerated cognitive decline in middle-aged and older adults. Healthy lifestyle adherence mitigates these effects, underscoring integrated strategies combining symptom management with lifestyle interventions to reduce dementia risk.
Acetylation-Dependent Histone H2AX Exchange Suppresses Pathological Senescence via MDC1 Degradation
Cellular senescence has a dual role in both tumor suppression and the promotion of age-related diseases. This paradox suggests the existence of functionally distinct "beneficial" and "detrimental" senescent states, yet the molecular basis that governs their fate has remained elusive. Here, we reveal that the dynamic exchange of histone H2AX on chromatin functions as an essential quality control mechanism that dictates the quality of senescence. We demonstrate that the histone acetyltransferase...
Integrating menopause duration and plasma metabolomics enhances cardiovascular risk stratification in aging women
Menopause-related metabolic remodeling may contribute to the excess cardiovascular disease (CVD) burden in aging women, yet the longitudinal metabolic correlates of time since menopause (TSM) and their prognostic value are unclear. In this prospective analysis of 67,582 postmenopausal women without baseline CVD from the UK Biobank, we profiled 251 plasma metabolites by nuclear magnetic resonance and followed participants for a median 13.7 years (8313 incident CVD events). Elastic net regression...
Mitotic errors as triggers of cell death and inflammation
Bursts of cell proliferation after infection, injury or transformation can coincide with DNA damage and spindle assembly defects. These increase the risk of cell cycle arrest in mitosis, during which many cellular processes are uniquely regulated. Ultimately, cells arrested during mitosis may die, but adaptive mechanisms also allow their escape into the next interphase. This step can have variable consequences, including chromosome missegregation, polyploidization and centrosome amplification....
Changes in transposable elements expression in male and female mice liver throughout aging
Aging has traditionally been studied through the lens of protein-coding genes, with a strong bias toward data derived from male organisms. As a result, the role of non-coding elements and potential sex-specific differences remains largely unexplored. Transposable elements (TEs), mobile sequences capable of altering genome structure and regulating gene expression, have recently gained attention for their roles in development and aging. However, despite this growing interest, key aspects of TE...
The interplay of comorbidity, disability, and physical activity among older adults living with HIV: insights from the CHANGE HIV study
No abstract
Spatial Reorganization of Chromatin Architecture Shapes the Expression Phenotype of Therapy-Induced Senescent Cells
Cellular senescence is a fundamental biological process contributing to aging, often accompanied by extensive chromatin remodeling. Dynamic alterations of three-dimensional (3D) genomic spatial structure, driven by chromatin reorganization, play a critical role in cell fate determination, but their relevance in therapy-induced senescence (TIS) remains underexplored. Here, we perform an integrative multi-omics analysis of Hi-C, ATAC-seq, CUT&RUN, and RNA-seq in primary human fibroblasts...
Chronic stress and the mitochondria-telomere axis: human evidence for a bioenergetic-debt model of early aging
Chronic stress has been linked to mitochondrial dysfunction and impaired telomere maintenance, yet the mechanistic relationships connecting these pathways in humans remain poorly resolved. Using longitudinal findings from the Guillén-Parra cohort as a motivating human example, this Perspective offers a reinterpreted framework that proposes a unifying energetic interpretation in which bioenergetic insufficiency-defined as a mismatch between stress-induced energetic demand and mitochondrial...
TDP-43-mediated alternative polyadenylation is associated with a reduction in VPS35 and VPS29 expression in frontotemporal dementia
TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) dysfunction is a hallmark of several neurodegenerative diseases, including frontotemporal dementia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and Alzheimer's disease. Although cryptic exon inclusion is a well-characterized consequence of TDP-43 loss of function, emerging evidence reveals broader roles in RNA metabolism, notably in the regulation of alternative polyadenylation (APA) of disease-relevant transcripts. In the present study, we examined 3' untranslated region...
Long-term effects of forty-hertz auditory stimulation as a treatment of Alzheimer's disease: Insights from an aged monkey model study
Based mainly on rodents studies, forty-hertz (40-Hz) physical stimulation has been regarded as a potential noninvasive treatment for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Considering the brain differences between rodents and humans, the effects of 40-Hz physical stimulation need to be further validated using nonhuman primates before its clinical application. Here, we took advantage of a rare opportunity to expose nine aged rhesus monkeys (26 to 31 y old) to 40-Hz auditory stimulation. Given the strong...