UCSF scientists engineered old fibroblast cells to turn their genes on and off in the same way as young fibroblasts. The old ...
New research suggests that long-term exposure to very low concentrations of chlorpyrifos, a widely used insecticide, can ...
As our understanding of aging evolves, so do the tools doctors use to slow it down—or even reverse it. Age-reversal techniques are no longer confined to futuristic fantasies; they are already being ...
Working out doesn't just build muscle but, in later life, helps maintain a powerful cellular machine that repairs damaged ...
Scientists have discovered how exercise protects aging muscles by suppressing DEAF1, a molecule they identified as a driver ...
Health experts tend to go back and forth on whether or not caffeine is actually good for you, or how much you should ingest every day. No matter which side you land on, there's no arguing that a cup ...
Demonstrates how dual-purpose therapeutic targets may address both hepatocellular carcinoma progression and cellular ...
WHIPPANY, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--One A Day®, the multivitamin and supplement brand rooted in 80+ years of nutritional science, announced today the launch of One A Day® Age Factor™ Cell Defense, a ...
Senescence. It’s a beautiful-sounding word whose tones suggest it should be a perfume or an essential oil. But that’s not even close. Senescence is the loss of a cell’s power to divide and grow, thus ...
New research shows how the Greenland shark’s heart keeps working for centuries by tolerating aging rather than avoiding it.
After a finite number of divisions, cells simply give up. As each round of replication trims their telomeres—the protective caps at the chromosome ends—those caps eventually become too short to ...