PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How mutations in bodily tissues affect ageing

2025-08-20
(Press-News.org) Two new studies from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have investigated how mutations that occur in muscles and blood vessels over time can affect ageing. The studies, which are published in Nature Aging, show that such mutations can reduce muscle strength and accelerate blood vessel ageing. The results can be of significance to the treatment of age-related diseases.

Somatic mutations are non-hereditary genetic changes in cells and occur during a lifetime as a result of environmental factors or through random errors when a cell copies its DNA before dividing. The mutations can give rise to cancer, but otherwise their effect has been disputed.

“We’ve discovered that mutations that accumulate in muscle cells and blood vessels can affect the tissue’s function and ability to regenerate – i.e. to replace damaged tissue with new healthy cells – an ability that also declines with age,” says principal investigator Maria Eriksson, professor at the Department of Medicine in Huddinge, Karolinska Institutet.

The same mutation as in progeria

In 2003, Professor Eriksson discovered the genetic cause of progeria, an inherited and extremely rare disease in children characterised by rapid ageing and cardiovascular complications. The child carries a mutation that leads to the formation of a pathogenic protein called progerin. Her research group has now been able to demonstrate the presence of the same mutation and protein in the blood vessels of some patients with chronic kidney disease.

“A somatic mutation has occurred in the patients’ vascular walls and we suspect that it’s related to the vascular damage that often accompanies kidney disease,” says the study’s first author Gwladys Revêchon, postdoc in Professor Eriksson’s group.

In complementary experiments in mice, the researchers discovered that cells that form progerin can propagate and cluster into groups of mutated cells that spread along the vascular walls, which can contribute to tissue damage and early vascular ageing.

The study combines basic and clinical research and was conducted in collaboration with Peter Stenvinkel, professor of nephrology at the Department of Clinical Science, Intervention and Technology at Karolinska Institutet and consultant at Karolinska University Hospital. He has established a large biobank of well-characterised material from patients, which has been crucial to the study.

“I’m very happy that we can now learn more about why people with kidney disease so easily become vascular compromised,” says Professor Stenvinkel.

Mutations affect muscle strength

In the second study, Professor Eriksson and her doctoral student Lara G. Merino and former postdoc Peter Vrtačnik used a mouse model to study how somatic mutations in muscles affect muscle strength. Such mutations accumulate during muscle regeneration, which is to say when muscles are rebuilt after having been damaged or strained.

An accumulation of somatic mutations in the muscles of mice led to impaired muscle regeneration, smaller muscle cells, lower muscle mass and reduced grip strength.

The results from both studies indicate that somatic mutations can reduce muscle strength and accelerate the ageing of the blood vessels.

“A better understanding of how somatic mutations affect the function of different tissues can help us develop new biomarkers and treatments for age-related diseases,” says Professor Eriksson. “Our findings also demonstrate the value of studying rare diseases since it can provide new approaches to more common conditions.”

The studies were primarily financed by grants from the Swedish Research Council, the Swedish Cancer Society, the European Research Council (ERC), the Center for Innovative Medicine (CIMED), the Loo and Hans Osterman Foundation for Medical Research and the Erik Rönnberg Award for Scientific Studies of Ageing and Age-related diseases. There are no reported conflicts of interest.

Publications:

“Recurrent somatic mutation and progerin expression in early vascular aging of chronic kidney disease”, Gwladys Revêchon, Anna Witasp, Nikenza Viceconte, Hafdis T. Helgadottir, Piotr Machtel, Fabiana Stefani, Daniel Whisenant, Agustin Sola-Carvajal, Dagmara McGuinness, Nadia O. Abutaleb, Gonzalo Artiach, Emelie Wallén Arzt, Inga Soveri, Anne Babler, Susanne Ziegler, Rafael Kramann, Magnus Bäck, Anders Thorell, George A. Truskey, Lars Wennberg, Paul G. Shiels, Annika Wernerson, Peter Stenvinkel, Maria Eriksson, Nature Aging, online 10 June 2025, doi: 10.1038/s43587-025-00882-6.

“Induced somatic mutation accumulation during skeletal muscle regeneration reduces muscle strength”, Peter Vrtačnik, Lara G. Merino, Santhilal Subhash, Hafdis T Helgadottir, Matthieu Bardin, Fabiana Stefani, Depin Wang, Ping Chen, Irene Franco, Gwladys Revêchon, Maria Eriksson, Nature Aging, online 20 August 2025, doi: 10.1038/s43587-025-00941-y.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Industry managed forests more likely to fuel megafires

2025-08-20
The odds of high-severity wildfire were nearly one-and-a-half times higher on industrial private land than on publicly owned forests, a new study found. Forests managed by timber companies were more likely to exhibit the conditions that megafires love—dense stands of regularly spaced trees with continuous vegetation connecting the understory to the canopy. The research, led by the University of Utah, University of California, Berkeley, and the United States Forest Service, is the first to identify how extreme weather conditions and forest management practices jointly impact fire severity.Leveraging ...

AI model developed by Dresden research team simultaneously detects multiple genetic colorectal cancer markers in tissue samples

2025-08-20
The multicenter study analyzed nearly 2,000 digitized tissue slides from colon cancer patients across seven independent cohorts in Europe and the US. The samples included both whole-slide images of tissue samples and clinical, demographic, and lifestyle data. The researchers developed a novel “multi-target transformer model” to predict a wide range of genetic alterations directly from routinely stained histological colon cancer tissue sections. Previous studies were typically limited to predicting single genetic alterations and did not account for co-occurring mutations ...

Foster care timing may affect children’s school performance

2025-08-20
Research shows that early childhood maltreatment is associated with significant delays in social and cognitive development. Unfortunately, according to the United States Department of Health and Human Services, children under age one face the highest risk of maltreatment, particularly neglect. The Child Protective Services (CPS) system is responsible for responding to maltreatment and preventing its recurrence. Most children with substantiated maltreatment reports remain with their parents, and CPS provides ...

Does red meat alter gut bacteria to aggravate inflammatory bowel disease?

2025-08-20
Epidemiological studies have revealed a strong correlation between red meat consumption and the development of inflammatory bowel disease. In a new study published in Molecular Nutrition and Food Research that was conducted in mice, red meat consumption caused an imbalance of bacteria in the intestinal microbiota.  Investigators fed mice various kinds of red meat including pork, beef, and mutton for two weeks, and then they induced inflammation in the colon. Intake of these three red meat diets exacerbated colonic inflammation. ...

Does LGBTQ+ workplace inclusion impact a company’s environmental performance?

2025-08-20
An analysis in Business Strategy and the Environment reveals that among U.S. firms, those with stronger LGBTQ+ inclusion have higher environmental performance scores and greater renewable energy consumption.   In the analysis of 2010–2023 data on 898 firms, this relationship was partially mediated by environmental innovation, indicating that LGBTQ+ inclusive workplace practices enhance environmental outcomes by fostering innovation.   Investigators also found that firms headquartered in states that recognized same-sex marriage prior to the Obergefell v. Hodges case (which ruled that the fundamental right to marry is guaranteed ...

Should additional food allergens have mandatory labelling due to anaphylaxis risk?

2025-08-20
The European Regulation list on mandatory labelling of foods includes 14 allergenic foods. Research published in Clinical & Experimental Allergy has identified eight additional foods frequently involved in food-induced anaphylaxis.  The research was based on an analysis of food-induced anaphylaxis cases reported to the Allergy Vigilance Network from 2002–2023. Allergenic foods involved in ≥1% of cases and not included in the European Regulation list included goat’s and sheep’s milk (2.8% of cases), buckwheat (2.4%), peas and lentil (1.8%), alpha-gal (1.7%), pine nut (1.6%), kiwi (1.5%), beehive products (1.0%), and apple (1.0%).  Due ...

Will climate change promote the spread of Dengue fever through Western Europe?

2025-08-20
Most people recover from Dengue fever, which is caused by a virus transmitted from the Asian tiger mosquito, but some infected individuals experience serious bleeding, a sudden drop in blood pressure, and even death. Although Dengue fever has long been recognized as a disease of the tropics and sub-tropics, a study published in Global Change Biology reveals that it is likely to spread increasingly northward and through Western Europe as climate change expands the Asian tiger mosquito’s habitat.  The mosquito lays its eggs in water where, with sufficient temperature, larvae develop and give rise to flying bloodsucking adults. After ...

Sleep problems in early teens associated with future self-harm

2025-08-20
Self-harm in young people is a major public health concern, rates are rising, and the adolescent years presents a critical period of intervention. Another modern challenge facing adolescents is sleep deficiency, with global reductions in total sleep time and inconsistent sleep patterns, and as many as 70% of teenagers getting inadequate sleep.  Published today in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, researchers at The University of Warwick and University of Birmingham have investigated this relationship between multiple measures of sleep problems and self-harm, using data from over 10,000 teenagers from the Millenium Cohort.  10,000 teenagers, ...

Supergiant star’s gigantic bubble surprises scientists

2025-08-20
Astronomers from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have discovered a vast and expanding bubble of gas and dust surrounding a red supergiant star – the largest structure of its kind ever seen in the Milky Way. The bubble, which contains as much mass as the Sun, was blown out in a mysterious stellar eruption around 4000 years ago. Why the star survived such a powerful event is a puzzle, the scientists say. The new results are published in the scientific journal Astronomy and Astrophysics, and the team was led by Mark Siebert, Chalmers, Sweden. Using the ALMA radio telescope ...

Most known species evolved during 'explosions’ of diversity, shows first analysis across ‘tree of life’

2025-08-20
The British evolutionary biologist JBS Haldane is said to have quipped that any divine being evidently had ‘an ordinate fondness for beetles’. This bon mot conveyed an important truth: the ‘tree of life’ – the family tree of all species, living or extinct – is very uneven. In places, it resembles a dense thicket of short twigs; elsewhere it has only sparse but long branches. A few groups tend to predominate: as Haldane pointed out, more than 40% of extant insects are beetles, while 60% of birds ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Building a better database to detect designer drugs

Breast tumors tunnel into fat cells to fuel up. Can we stop them?

Study finds heart health declining in older adults with certain cardiovascular diseases

Earth System Models project the start of the Amazon dieback within the 21st century

New graphene technology matures brain organoids faster, may unlock neurodegenerative insights

High-frequency molecular vibrations initiate electron movement

Fat cells under false command

How mutations in bodily tissues affect ageing

Industry managed forests more likely to fuel megafires

AI model developed by Dresden research team simultaneously detects multiple genetic colorectal cancer markers in tissue samples

Foster care timing may affect children’s school performance

Does red meat alter gut bacteria to aggravate inflammatory bowel disease?

Does LGBTQ+ workplace inclusion impact a company’s environmental performance?

Should additional food allergens have mandatory labelling due to anaphylaxis risk?

Will climate change promote the spread of Dengue fever through Western Europe?

Sleep problems in early teens associated with future self-harm

Supergiant star’s gigantic bubble surprises scientists

Most known species evolved during 'explosions’ of diversity, shows first analysis across ‘tree of life’

World Mosquito Day 2025: Europe sets new records for mosquito-borne diseases: ECDC supporting Member States in adapting to ‘new normal’

Study finds coastal wetlands generate $90 million annually for Virginia communities

Study uncovers biological clues about daytime sleepiness

Study links teen vaping to increased risk of smoking and health issues

Youth vaping consistently linked to subsequent smoking, marijuana and alcohol use

Diet rich in omega-3 fatty acids may help ward off short sightedness in children

For apes, out of sight isn’t out of mind

Mysterious fickle hill earthquake in Northern California may have unexpected source

Boys can help break taboo around periods

Illinois researchers pair nanocatalysts, food waste to reduce carbon emissions in aviation

New research shows how nerve cells can be protected against ALS

Timing is everything: Finding treatment windows in genetic brain disease

[Press-News.org] How mutations in bodily tissues affect ageing