(Press-News.org) How old are you, really? Your chronological age is the number of years you have been alive. Your biological age is how old your cells are which scientists believe may better assess one’s age-related health and disease risk. People biologically age at different rates, depending on genetic and environmental factors, so that a person’s chronological age does not necessarily match their biological age. In recent years, direct-to-consumer biological age tests have become increasingly accessible and popular as interest has increased in this nascent science.
Many of these tests work by looking at distinct changes to the DNA in a patient’s blood or saliva. These changes become more abundant as cells age, a phenomenon known as the “epigenetic clock.” Importantly, though, it is currently unknown if the epigenetic clock advances with similar pace in the about 200 different cell types in a human body.
A recent study by Konrad Hochedlinger, Rebecca Gorelov and colleagues from Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, USA, published in Stem Cell Reports, aims to shed light on this question, asking how the presence of stem cells within a given tissue or organ impacts its epigenetic clock. When measuring DNA changes in each single cell of a tissue individually, rather than in all cells mixed together, it became evident the stem cells in skeletal muscle, blood and trachea had a lower epigenetic age than the more mature cells. A comparatively younger epigenetic age was not a universal feature of stem cells, though, as stem cells in other tissues such as skin and intestine had the same epigenetic age as the more mature cells. Further experiments showed that the epigenetic age of a stem cell is linked to the rate at which it divides and makes new cells to regenerate and repair it’s tissue of origin. This rate was comparably higher in skin and intestine than in muscle or blood.
This research shows that the epigenetic age of a tissue as a whole is influenced by the frequency and activity of its stem cells, which in itself is subject to change in response to ageing, injury, or disease. These findings have important repercussions for the interpretation of commercial biological age tests and will help to refine their fidelity and utility for the future.
END
Reading your biological age in your blood or saliva? It’s not as simple as that
2024-08-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Pong prodigy: Hydrogel material shows unexpected learning abilities
2024-08-22
In a study published today (22 August) in Cell Reports Physical Science, a team led by Dr Yoshikatsu Hayashi demonstrated that a simple hydrogel - a type of soft, flexible material - can learn to play the simple 1970s computer game ‘Pong’. The hydrogel, interfaced with a computer simulation of the classic game via a custom-built multi-electrode array, showed improved performance over time.
Dr Hayashi, a biomedical engineer at the University of Reading’s School of Biological Sciences, said: "Our research shows that even very simple materials can exhibit complex, adaptive behaviours typically associated with living systems or sophisticated AI.
"This ...
AI can speed up drug development
2024-08-22
Artificial intelligence (AI) can help identify molecules that could serve as new drugs for mental health disorders. AI can be used to predict the three-dimensional structures of important receptors and thereby speed up the development of potential drugs. This is the result of a new study from Uppsala University published in Science Advances.
In drug development, experimental methods are often used to determine the three-dimensional structures of target proteins and to understand how molecules bind to them. This information is needed to design drug molecules efficiently. However, the process to determine structures can be demanding, meaning this ...
Bilateral reference framework for high-resolution dichotomous image segmentation
2024-08-22
A research team has developed a computer vision technique that can perform dichotomous image segmentation, high-resolution salient object detection, and concealed object detection in the same framework. Their novel bilateral reference framework (BiRefNet) is able to capture tiny-pixel features and holds potential for a wide range of practical computer vision applications.
The work is published in the journal CAAI Artificial Intelligence Research on August 22.
In computer vision research, ...
The future of robotics: Brain-inspired technologies paving the way
2024-08-22
In the ever-evolving field of robotics, a groundbreaking approach has emerged, revolutionizing how robots perceive, navigate, and interact with their environments. This new frontier, known as brain-inspired navigation technology, integrates insights from neuroscience into robotics, offering enhanced capabilities and efficiency.
Brain-inspired navigation technologies are not just a mere improvement over traditional methods; they represent a paradigm shift. By mimicking the neural mechanisms of animals, these technologies provide robots with the ability to navigate through complex and unknown terrains with unprecedented accuracy ...
IHME’s 2024 Roux Prize awarded to Community Health Impact Coalition CEO – recognized for contributions to improve population health
2024-08-22
On behalf of the Community Health Impact Coalition (CHIC), Dr. Madeleine Ballard, global health leader and CEO of CHIC, is the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation’s 2024 Roux Prize winner. The award recognizes Dr. Ballard’s work alongside thousands of community health workers (CHWs) to secure quality care for all, through evidence-based health systems benefiting millions of people across the world.
Half of the world's population lacks access to essential health services. Around the globe, CHWs have stepped up to address this critical gap and deliver care in a way that improves access, increases equity, and saves lives. Despite their ...
New detectable gravitational wave source from collapsing stars predicted from simulations
2024-08-22
The death of a massive, rapidly spinning star can shake the universe. And the resulting ripples — known as gravitational waves — could be felt by instruments on Earth, according to new research published August 22 in The Astrophysical Journal Letters. These new sources of gravitational waves just await discovery, the scientists behind the research predict.
The gravitational waves emerge following the violent deaths of rapidly rotating stars 15 to 20 times the mass of the sun. Upon running ...
New study examines use of opioids for chronic cough
2024-08-22
INDIANAPOLIS – Chronic cough, with symptoms lasting more than eight weeks, affects approximately one in 10 adults. Cough is among the most common reasons for seeking medical care in the United States, yet chronic cough is difficult to treat. One of the largest studies of chronic cough and one of the first to explore the use of opioids, which are known to suppress cough, to treat these patients, has found that 20 percent of patients with chronic cough received a prescription for a cough suppressant containing an opioid.
With the goals of estimating opioid prescription in the chronic cough population and of informing alternative treatment ...
SwRI develops novel methodology for measuring blood-brain barrier permeability
2024-08-22
SAN ANTONIO — August 22, 2024 —Scientists at Southwest Research Institute have developed a new screening method to identify drug formulations that can penetrate the blood-brain barrier (BBB), to facilitate treatment of brain diseases and conditions.
“The BBB protects the brain and central nervous system from potentially harmful substances in the bloodstream, regulating the transport of essential nutrients and ions while maintaining the stability of the central nervous system,” said Research Engineer Nicholas McMahon, from SwRI’s Bioengineering group. “However, the very characteristics that make the BBB such an ...
Role of bitter polyphenols in the regulation of blood sugar
2024-08-22
Bioactive compounds like polyphenols and their health benefits have long captured public attention and interest. Commonly present in plant-based food like fruits, vegetables, seeds, coffee, and tea, the polyphenols have a strong bitter taste and, in the normal course, is excreted by our body due to poor absorption.
The polyphenols interact with human bitter taste receptors also known as Type 2 taste receptors (T2R) expressed within and outside the oral cavity. Notably, the activation of T2R expressed along the ...
Promising treatment for rectal cancer confirmed in major study
2024-08-22
A new treatment for locally advanced rectal cancer shows favourable results in that surgery can sometimes be avoided completely. It also reduces the risk of recurrence. The method has been confirmed as effective in a comprehensive study conducted at Uppsala University and published in eClinicalMedicine.
“The tumour disappears completely more often, thereby increasing the chance of avoiding surgery and retaining normal rectum and rectal function. Moreover, there are fewer metastases,” says Bengt Glimelius, Professor of Oncology ...