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Plasma Proteome Profiling of Centenarian Across Switzerland Reveals Key Youth‐Associated Proteins

The full list of differentially expressed proteins was compared to the list of aging biomarkers in blood determined by the TAME working group (Justice et al. 2018), see full list of APs in Table S2d. Of the seven aging biomarkers selected by TAME as gold standard, five proteins (CST3, GDF15, IL6, NPPB, TNF) were available and significantly differentially expressed when comparing healthy controls with centenarians or with geriatric patients; two proteins (CRP, IGF1) were unavailable from the Olink panels (Cardiometabolic I and Inflammation I).

On the expanded list of blood-based biomarkers (74 total) selected by TAME, when comparing healthy controls with centenarians, 47 biomarkers were not available in both panels (63.5%). Of the available markers, 23 were significantly differentially expressed in centenarians (85.2%) and 4 were not significantly differentially expressed in centenarians (14.8%). When comparing healthy controls with geriatric patients, 47 biomarkers were not available in both panels (63.5%); 25 were significantly differentially expressed in the geriatric group (92.6%), and only 2 were not significantly differentially expressed in hospitalized geriatric patients (7.4%). Only 2 proteins (SERPINE1, SOD1) among the 25 proteins available in the SWISS100 dataset demonstrated different results in both comparisons (Healthy2Cent and Healthy2Geriatric). Thus, both the short and expanded list of blood-based biomarkers proposed by TAME as APs are highly reproducible in the SWISS100 study based on proximity extension assay. Table S2d contains the complete list of DEPs in blood with age that overlap between both studies.

DNA-protein cross-links promote cGAS-STING–driven premature aging and embryonic lethality

Unrepaired DNA-protein crosslinks—highly toxic tangles of protein and DNA—cause a process that leads to premature aging and embryonic lethality in mice.

The findings in Science reveal a previously unrecognized link between defective DNA repair and immune-driven inflammatory disease.


DNA-protein cross-links (DPCs) are highly toxic DNA lesions that block replication and transcription, but their impact on organismal physiology is unclear. We identified a role for the metalloprotease SPRTN in preventing DPC-driven immunity and its pathological consequences. Loss of SPRTN activity during replication and mitosis lead to unresolved DNA damage, chromosome segregation errors, micronuclei formation, and cytosolic DNA release that activates the cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS)–stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway. In a Sprtn knock-in mouse model of Ruijs-Aalfs progeria syndrome, chronic cGas-Sting signaling caused embryonic lethality through inflammation and innate immune responses. Surviving mice displayed aging phenotypes beginning in embryogenesis, which persisted into adulthood.

Beta-2-Microglobulin Is Bad For Neurogenesis: What’s My Data? (6-Test Analysis)

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A New Alzheimer’s Target Emerges: Blocking One Protein Restores Memory in Mice

Researchers have identified a protein that links brain immune activity, metabolism, and amyloid clearance, suggesting a new way to enhance current Alzheimer’s treatments. Alzheimer’s disease can look like a set of grim headlines: soaring case counts, ballooning health care costs, and an aging pop

Lifespan and Fecundity Impacts of Reduced Insulin Signalling Can Be Directed by Mito‐Nuclear Epistasis in Drosophila

Insulin signalling extends lifespan across species but, in Drosophila, this effect can vary among populations. This variable response is underpinned by epistasis between mtDNA and nDNA.

Enhanced Selenium Supplement Extends Lifespan and Delays Multi‐Organs Aging by Regulating the Sik1 Pathway Through Maintaining Calcium Homeostasis

In healthy aging strategies, nutritional supplements synergize with optimized dietary and lifestyle interventions by modulating aging-related molecular pathways.[ 8, 9 ] Notably, NMN exerts multi-organ anti-aging effects by elevating NAD+ levels to activate the SIRT1 pathway, thereby significantly enhancing mitochondrial function while reducing oxidative stress and DNA damage.[ 10 ] Similarly, curcumin delays aging and related diseases through pleiotropic mechanisms involving oxidative stress regulation, anti-inflammatory actions, telomere maintenance, and sirtuin protein modulation.[ 11 ] However, practical applications face significant challenges: bioactive compounds like resveratrol and curcumin suffer from limited bioavailability due to poor aqueous solubility and first-pass metabolism, while excessive supplementation of antioxidants such as vitamins C/E may disrupt reactive oxygen species (ROS) signaling homeostasis, potentially inducing cellular toxicity or even increasing hemorrhagic risk.[ 12-14 ] Future development of anti-aging supplements should focus on: 1) innovative formulation strategies to enhance bioavailability; 2) optimized dosing regimens to minimize toxicity; and 3) long-term clinical studies to validate efficacy.

Selenium, an essential trace element with diverse biological activities, plays a critical role in healthy aging.[ 15-17 ] ≈1 billion people worldwide are affected by selenium deficiency, which is closely linked to neurological disorders, cardiovascular abnormalities, malignancies, and immune dysfunction.[ 18-20 ] Substantial evidence supports the anti-aging effects of selenium through multiple mechanisms: 1) Selenomethionine (SeMet) effectively suppresses Fe2+/H2O2- or Aβ-induced free radical generation, demonstrating therapeutic potential for Alzheimer’s disease characterized by oxidative stress;[ 21 ] 2) Selenium supplementation elevates serum GPx3 levels, a selenoprotein predominantly localized in the basement membrane of renal proximal tubules, modulating mitochondrial quality control pathways to mitigate heavy metal-induced renal aging;[ 22 ] and 3) Our recent findings reveal that selenium supplementation significantly attenuates age-related muscle atrophy by preserving redox homeostasis and regulating muscle protein metabolism.[ 23 ] Recent clinical trials in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) demonstrated that oral administration of selenium nanoparticles (SeNPs) as a dietary supplement (200 µg day−1) in combination with Bev+AP chemotherapy significantly enhanced therapeutic outcomes compared to chemotherapy alone. The SeNPs combination group showed remarkable tumor regression, with progression disease rates decreasing dramatically from 50% to 0% and partial response rates increasing to 83.3%, along with significantly improved objective response rate and disease control rate.[ 24 ] Importantly, this regimen maintained excellent safety profiles without triggering fluctuations in pro-inflammatory or immunosuppressive cytokines. These compelling findings not only establish SeNPs as a safe and effective adjuvant therapy for advanced NSCLC but also provide valuable clinical translation data for nano-selenium formulations in oncology. Despite selenium’s proven benefits in reducing oxidative damage, maintaining genomic stability, and delaying telomere shortening, its narrow therapeutic window, limited bioavailability, and specific mechanisms in multi-organ protection during natural aging require further investigation.

Nanodelivery carriers have emerged as a next-generation platform for gene and drug delivery, offering tunable physicochemical properties such as size, composition, and surface modifications.[ 25 ] Our team has developed organically-bridged mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) by incorporating functional diselenide bonds into the silica framework at the molecular level, addressing the critical challenge of poor biodegradability in conventional silica materials.[ 26 ] This nanocarrier exhibits unique dual redox-responsive properties, allowing for more precise maintenance of redox homeostasis compared to traditional antioxidants, aligning with the core goal of preserving organismal homeostasis in anti-aging research. Building on this breakthrough, a comprehensive research framework was established: first, this study constructed a natural aging mouse model with MSNs, disulfide-bridged MSNs (SMSNs), commercially available SeMet as controls and then compared the effects of diselenide-bridged MSNs (SeMSNs) on lifespan extension, frailty delay, and multi-organ anti-aging. Next, key pathways and targets were identified through multi-organ transcriptome sequencing, followed by in-depth mechanistic studies. Finally, clinical translation was integrated by analyzing the correlation between serum selenium levels and aging biomarkers in the elderly, and validating the clinical effects of SeMSNs using primary adipose precursor cells (APCs) models. This systematic approach provides a solid theoretical foundation and clinical evidence for the application of nano-selenium in anti-aging research.

The Wnt–NAD+ axis in cancer, aging, and tissue regeneration

Wnt–NAD+ axis in stem cell function.

The Wnt–NAD+ axis is a fundamental regulatory hub in which metabolic state meets developmental signaling and it acts as a metabolic sensor that coordinates tissue regeneration with cellular energy status through compartment specific NAD+ pools.

Wnt signaling regulates NAD+ metabolism by controlling the expression of key biosynthetic enzymes and NAD+ consumers, while NAD+-dependent proteins modulate Wnt activity through direct interactions and epigenetic modifications.

Sirtuins exhibit tissue-specific and subcellular compartment-dependent roles in Wnt regulation where they function as activators or suppressors depending on the cellular bioenergetic state.

The Wnt–NAD+ axis maintains stem cell function and self-renewal capacity through metabolic/signaling integration, and its disruption during aging leads to declining regenerative capacity.

The progressive dysregulation of compartment-specific Wnt–NAD+ coordination contributes to stem cell exhaustion and multiple pathological conditions, indicating that therapeutic strategies must consider tissue-specific and subcellular targeting. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/Wnt%E2%80%93NAD-axis


Episode 2 — The Prospect of Immortality & Human Cryopreservation

Host: Kyle O’Brien — https://twitter.com/analog_kyle.

Guest: Emil Kendziorra — https://twitter.com/emilkendziorra.
Founder of @TomorrowBio.

Theme || the prospect of immortality & human cryopreservation.

Is Death just a Technical Problem we haven’t solved yet?

In this episode of State Change, Kyle O’Brien sits down with Emil Kendziorra, founder of Tomorrow Bio, to explore the science, ethics, and future of cryopreservation — the process that may one day allow humans (and even pets) to be revived centuries from now.

We talk about the brain, identity, consciousness, why people fear death, and what it means to rewrite the social contract when life extension becomes real.

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