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Volume 3 Issue 4, April 2023

Intravital imaging of aging neural stem cells

In this issue, Yicheng Wu et al. use chronic intravital imaging to monitor neural stem cells in the hippocampal niche of young and middle-aged mice for several months. Their study reveals multiple aging-associated alterations in the behavior of neural stem cells and their progeny that lead to reduced clonal output. The image cover shows an artistic overlay of Nestin–GFP-labeled neural stem cells in young (blue) and middle-aged (red) mice, which makes the decline in neural stem cells with advancing age apparent. Nuclei are counterstained with DAPI in young mice (grey).

See Wu et al.

Cover image: Yicheng Wu, University of Zurich, Switzerland. Cover design: Lauren Heslop

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News & Views

  • The ability of adult neural stem cells to produce new neurons (neurogenesis) declines markedly during aging, but exactly how this occurs is largely unknown. Using sophisticated in vivo imaging, a study in Nature Aging shows that aging affects several steps of neurogenesis — most notably, increasing the death of newborn clones.

    • Olivia Y. Zhou
    • Anne Brunet
    News & Views
  • Epigenetic changes are a driver of senescence and occur during aging. A study in Nature Aging shows how chromatin-mediated loss of transcription fidelity, previously shown in yeast and worms, also occurs in mammalian cells and could constitute a new hallmark of senescence and aging.

    • Nikita Isima
    • Jesús Gil
    News & Views
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Research Briefings

  • We characterized the enterotypes of a large cohort of individuals of 20–117 years of age and found that the gut microbiome of centenarians has features that are usually associated with gut microbiomes of young individuals: dominance of Bacteroides spp., increase in species evenness, enrichment of potentially beneficial Bacteroidetes and depletion of potential pathobionts.

    Research Briefing
  • Clinical predictors of type 2 diabetes can be improved by considering blood-based DNA methylation scores. We derive the scores in 9,835 Scottish individuals and then test their performance against clinical predictors in 4,778 additional Scottish volunteers and 1,451 German volunteers.

    Research Briefing
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