Neuritogenesis

Three 2023 papers on the initial stage of neuronal differentiation, starting with a rodent study of taurine’s effects:

“We aimed to assess the role of taurine (TAU) in axonal sprouting against cerebral ischemic injury, clarify the function of mitochondria in TAU-induced axonal sprouting, and further determine the underlying potential molecular mechanism.

experiment design

We determined that TAU improved motor function recovery and restored neurogenesis in ischemic stroke. This possibly occurred via improvements in mitochondrial function.

We investigated that the Sonic hedgehog (Shh) pathway exerted an important role in these effects. Our study findings highlighted the novel viewpoint that TAU promoted axonal sprouting by improving Shh-mediated mitochondrial function in cerebral ischemic stroke.”

https://www.scielo.br/j/acb/a/nxKvGXGk9g6gRkHxybMfbYJ/?lang=en “Taurine promotes axonal sprouting via Shh-mediated mitochondrial improvement in stroke”


A rodent study investigated effects of a soy isoflavone gut microbiota metabolite:

“Perinatally-infected adolescents living with HIV-1 (pALHIV) appear uniquely vulnerable to developing substance use disorders (SUD). Medium spiny neurons (MSNs) in the nucleus accumbens core (NAcc), an integrator of cortical and thalamic input, have been implicated as a key structural locus for the pathogenesis of SUD.

Treatment with estrogenic compounds (e.g., 17β-estradiol) induces prominent alterations to neuronal and dendritic spine structure in the NAcc supporting an innovative means to remodel neuronal circuitry. The carcinogenic nature of 17β-estradiol, however, limits its translational utility.

Plant-derived polycyclic phenols, or phytoestrogens, whose chemical structure resembles 17β-estradiol may afford an alternative strategy to target estrogen receptors. The phytoestrogen S-Equol (SE), permeates the blood-brain barrier, exhibits selective affinity for estrogen receptor β (ERβ), and serves as a neuroprotective and/or neurorestorative therapeutic for HIV-1-associated neurocognitive and affective alterations.

Beginning at approximately postnatal day (PD) 28, HIV-1 transgenic (Tg) animals were treated with a daily oral dose of 0.2 mg of SE. The SE dose of 0.2 mg was selected for two primary reasons, including:

  1. A dose-response experimental paradigm established 0.2 mg of SE as the most effective dose for mitigating neurocognitive deficits in sustained attention in the HIV-1 Tg rat; and
  2. The dose, which yielded a daily amount of 0.25–1.0 mg/kg/SE (i.e., approximately 2.5–10 mg in a 60 kg human), is translationally relevant (i.e., well below the daily isoflavone intake of most elderly Japanese.

Daily oral treatment continued through PD 90.

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HIV-1 Tg animals exhibited an initial increase in dendrite length (A) and the number of dendritic spines (B) early in development; parameters which subsequently decreased across time. In sharp contrast, dendrite length and the number of dendritic spines were stable across development in control animals.

Targeting these alterations with the selective ERβ agonist SE during the formative period induces long-term modifications to synaptodendritic structure, whereby MSNs in the NAcc in HIV-1 Tg animals treated with SE resemble control animals at PD 180.”

https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/nipt-2023-0008/html “Constitutive expression of HIV-1 viral proteins induces progressive synaptodendritic alterations in medium spiny neurons: implications for substance use disorders”


A rodent brain cell study investigated soy isoflavones’ effects on a different estrogen receptor:

“We evaluated effects of isoflavones using mouse primary cerebellar culture, astrocyte-enriched culture, Neuro-2A clonal cells, and co-culture with neurons and astrocytes. Soybean isoflavone-augmented estradiol mediated dendrite arborization in Purkinje cells.

These results indicate that ERα plays an essential role in isoflavone-induced neuritogenesis. However, G-protein-coupled ER (GPER1) signaling is also necessary for astrocyte proliferation and astrocyte–neuron communication, which may lead to isoflavone-induced neuritogenesis.

We highlight the novel possibility that isoflavones enhance dendritogenesis and neuritogenesis, indicating that they can be a useful supplementary compound during brain development or in the injured brain.”

https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/24/10/9011 “Isoflavones Mediate Dendritogenesis Mainly through Estrogen Receptor α”

Brain endothelial cells

Six 2023 papers on the subject, starting with a rodent study:

“One of the primary discoveries of our study is that the endothelial cell (EC) transcriptome is dynamically regulated by both aging and heterochronic parabiosis. We found that ECs, when compared with other brain cell types, exhibited one of the highest fractions of aging-related genes that were rescued after heterochronic parabiosis in the old brain, and similarly, the highest fraction of aging-related genes that were disrupted after heterochronic parabiosis in the young brain. This finding supports our previous research that vasculature is strongly affected by aging and disease, and is capable of regrowth after heterochronic parabiosis or systemic GDF11 treatment.

parabiosis

We observed that a subset of ECs was classified as mitogenic. It is reasonable to speculate that the growth of these cells, which is probably prevented or suspended by the inflammatory environment of the aged brain, may be among the cell populations that respond to these interventions.

Although proteostasis in brain ECs has not been thoroughly investigated, they are apparently long-lived cells and, like neurons, might therefore accumulate protein aggregates with age, potentially compromising their function. ECs become senescent with age, but parabiosis may reverse that phenotype as well.

These findings underline the strong susceptibility and malleability of ECs, which are directly exposed to secreted factors in both brain parenchyma and blood, to adapt to changes in their microenvironment. ECs, despite comprising <5% of the total number of brain cells, are a promising and accessible target for treatment of aging and its associated diseases.”

https://www.nature.com/articles/s43587-023-00373-6 “Heterochronic parabiosis reprograms the mouse brain transcriptome by shifting aging signatures in multiple cell types”


A review elaborated on endothelial cell senescence:

“ECs form highly dynamic and differentiated monolayers arranged in a vascular network. Within brain tissue, the ECs of arteries, capillaries, and veins present different molecular characteristics. The main functions of ECs as a major cellular component of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) are to express cell membrane transport proteins, produce inflammatory mediators, deliver nutrients to brain tissue, and prevent drugs and toxins from entering the central nervous system.

ECs are the first echelons of cells affected at the onset of senescence due to their special structural position in the vascular network. Senescent ECs produce reactive oxygen species (ROS), which directly inhibit smooth muscle potassium channels and cause vasoconstriction.

The vascular endothelium is in a constant process of damage and repair, and once damage occurs, ECs replenish themselves to remove damaged cells. EC senescence makes the endothelium less capable of self-repair. With the decline in endothelial function, excess accumulated senescent cells express senescence-associated secretory phenotypes (SASPs), which result in senescence of adjacent cells, and eventually degeneration of vascular function.”

https://www.aginganddisease.org/EN/10.14336/AD.2023.0226-1 “Endothelial Senescence in Neurological Diseases”


A human study investigated above-mentioned differences in brain endothelial cells:

“We performed single nucleus RNAseq on tissue from 32 Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and non-AD donors each with five cortical regions: entorhinal cortex, inferior temporal gyrus, prefrontal cortex, visual association cortex, and primary visual cortex. Analysis of 51,586 endothelial cells revealed unique gene expression patterns across the five regions in non-AD donors.

Visual cortex areas, which are affected late in AD progression and experience less neurodegeneration, expressed more genes related to vasculogenesis and angiogenesis. Highly vulnerable areas such as the entorhinal cortex expressed more oxidative stress-related genes in normal aged brain, suggesting endothelial dysfunction in this region even in the absence of severe AD pathology.

The present work shows that senescence-related gene signatures are increased across several brain regions, and confirms these changes in endothelial cells in the absence of other vascular cell types. While endothelial cells are not typically associated with protein aggregation, upregulated protein folding pathways suggest that proteostatic stress is a key pathway in this cell type.”

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.02.16.528825v1.full “Endothelial Cells are Heterogeneous in Different Brain Regions and are Dramatically Altered in Alzheimer’s Disease”


A human cell study abstract on above-mentioned blood-brain barrier endothelial cells:

“The BBB is a semi-permeable and protective barrier of the brain, primarily composed of endothelial cells interconnected by tight junction proteins, that regulates movement of ions and molecules between blood and neural matter. In pathological conditions such as traumatic brain injury (TBI), disruption of the BBB contributes to leakage of solutes and fluids into brain parenchyma, resulting in onset of cerebral edema and elevation of intracranial pressure.

The objective of this study was to determine upstream regulators of NLRP3 signaling and BBB hyperpermeability, particularly to determine if extracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) via P2X7R, a purinergic receptor, promotes NLRP3 inflammasome activation. Extracellular ATP is a major contributor of secondary injuries following TBI.

Our results suggest that extracellular ATP promotes NLRP3 inflammasome activation. Subsequent caspase-1 and MMP-9-mediated tight junction disorganization are major pathways that lead to BBB dysfunction and hyperpermeability following conditions such as TBI.”

https://journals.physiology.org/doi/abs/10.1152/physiol.2023.38.S1.5732827 “Regulation of Blood-Brain Barrier Endothelial Cell Hyperpermeability by NLRP3 Inflammasome Inhibition”


A human study further investigated effects of traumatic brain injury on brain endothelial cells:

“We previously demonstrated that extracellular vesicles (EVs) released from injured brains led to endothelial barrier disruption and vascular leakage. Here, we enriched plasma EVs from TBI patients (TEVs), detected high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) exposure to 50.33 ± 10.17% of TEVs, and found the number of HMGB1+TEVs correlated with injury severity. We then investigated for the first time the impact of TEVs on endothelial function using adoptive transfer models.

HMGB1 is secreted by activated cells or passively released by necrotic or injured cells. After post-translational modifications, it interacts with receptors such as toll-like receptors (TLRs; e.g., TLRs 2, 4, and 9) and the receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) to trigger multiple signaling pathways and mediate inflammatory and immune responses. Extracellular HMGB1 promotes endothelial dysfunction, leukocyte activation and recruitment, as well as thrombosis.

These results suggest that circulating EVs isolated from patients with TBI alone are sufficient to induce endothelial dysfunction. They contribute to secondary brain injury that are dependent on immunologically active HMGB1 exposed on their surface. This finding provided new insight for development of potential therapeutic targets and diagnostic biomarkers for TBI.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1043661823001470 “Circulating extracellular vesicles from patients with traumatic brain injury induce cerebrovascular endothelial dysfunction”


To wrap up, eat mushrooms to protect your brain endothelial cells!

“Natural compound ergothioneine (ET), which is synthesised by certain fungi and bacteria, has considerable cytoprotective potential. We previously demonstrated anti-inflammatory effects of ET on 7-ketocholesterol (7KC)-induced endothelial injury in human blood-brain barrier endothelial cells (hCMEC/D3). 7KC is an oxidised form of cholesterol present in atheromatous plaques and sera of patients with hypercholesterolaemia and diabetes mellitus. The aim of this study was to elucidate the protective effect of ET on 7KC-induced mitochondrial damage.

Protective effects of ET were diminished when endothelial cells were coincubated with verapamil hydrochloride (VHCL), a nonspecific inhibitor of the ET transporter OCTN1 (SLC22A4). This outcome demonstrates that ET-mediated protection against 7KC-induced mitochondrial damage occurred intracellularly and not through direct interaction with 7KC.

OCTN1 mRNA expression itself was significantly increased in endothelial cells after 7KC treatment, consistent with the notion that stress and injury may increase ET uptake. Our results indicate that ET can protect against 7KC-induced mitochondrial injury in brain endothelial cells.”

https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/24/6/5498 “Protective Effect of Ergothioneine against 7-Ketocholesterol-Induced Mitochondrial Damage in hCMEC/D3 Human Brain Endothelial Cells”

The brain-gut-lung circuit

This 2023 rodent study investigated mechanisms of improving stress-worsened respiratory viral infection:

“Our study demonstrates that chronic psychological stress significantly increases host vulnerability to influenza A virus (IAV) infection characterized by a distorted gut microbiome and deregulated alveolar macrophages (AMs) response. We show that microbiome-derived γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) functions as a tonic signal to support survival, self-renewing, and immunoregulation of AMs, and hence optimized pulmonary defensive response.

Chronic psychological stress causes gut microbiome dysbiosis and defective GABA generation, leading to loss of AMs homeostasis and aggravated viral pneumonia. The data indicate that:

  1. Microbial GABA is released in the circulation,
  2. Sensed by AMs via the GABAA receptor,
  3. Promoting cellular mitochondrial metabolism,
  4. For increased production of α-ketoglutarate (αKG),
  5. Which triggers Tet2-mediated DNA hydroxymethylation,
  6. To enable PPARγ-centered gene program,
  7. Supporting AMs homeostasis and function.

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  • Re-localization of GABA-generating probiotics,
  • Supplementation of αKG, or
  • Adoptive transfer of GABA-conditioned macrophages,
  • Substantially rectifies stress-induced disruption inter-organ communication, and
  • Alleviates symptoms of viral pneumonia.

Our current study unveils an unappreciated regulatory circuitry that connects the brain, gut, and lung to mediate neurological modulation of host defensive response.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2090123223001716 “Gut microbial GABAergic signaling improves stress-associated innate immunity to respiratory viral infection”


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A biomarker for impaired cognitive function?

This 2023 rodent study investigated associations between a drug, a gut microbiota species, cognitive function, and proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-6:

“We show that gut microbiota is altered by metformin, which is necessary for protection against ageing-associated cognitive function declines in aged mice.

  • Mice treated with antibiotics did not exhibit metformin-mediated cognitive function protection.
  • Treatment with Akkermansia muciniphila improved cognitive function in aged mice.
  • A. muciniphila decreased proinflammatory-associated pathways, particularly that of proinflammatory cytokine interleukin (IL)-6, in both peripheral blood and hippocampal profiles, which was correlated with cognitive function improvement.
  • An IL-6 antibody protected cognitive function, and an IL-6 recombinant protein abolished the protective effect of A. muciniphila on cognitive function in aged mice.

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A. muciniphila, which is mediated in gut microbiota by metformin, modulates inflammation-related pathways in the host and improves cognitive function in aged mice by reducing proinflammatory cytokine IL-6 both systemically and in the hippocampus. This is direct evidence to validate that gut microbiota mediate the effect of metformin on cognitive improvement.”

https://microbiomejournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40168-023-01567-1Akkermansia muciniphila, which is enriched in the gut microbiota by metformin, improves cognitive function in aged mice by reducing the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-6″


IL-6 may be useful with other biomarkers of impaired cognitive function. It’s too coarse to track improved cognitive function past a certain point, though. Maybe the current IL-6 blood test can be refined as high-specificity CRP and regular CRP blood tests were done?

We don’t need to take this drug or be concerned about this gut bacteria species in order to lower inflammation. Click the IL-6 link above and see blog posts such as Part 2 of Rejuvenation therapy and sulforaphane for other methods.

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Transgenerational transmission of stress

This 2023 rodent study found that effects of stress during mid-late gestation were epigenetically transmitted to the first, second, and third female generations:

“We investigated effects of gestational chronic variable stress (CVS) in rats using restraint and social isolation stress in the parental F0 generation. Only the F0 pregnant dams were subjected to stress.

When a pregnant female experiences adversity, impacts of that stress affect exposed somatic tissues (F0 generation), the fetuses (F1 generation), and the fetuses’ germline (F2 generation). A true transgenerational inheritance arises when germline epimutations are transmitted to unexposed F3 offspring.

A subset of F1 rats was housed in an enriched environment (EE) to mitigate adverse effects of CVS. F2 offspring reared in EE had increased birth weights, but their uterine gene expression patterns remained comparable to those of stressed animals.

ijms-24-03734-g001

We provide evidence that psychological and psychosocial CVS alters inflammatory status and endocrine markers in uteri of adult dams through transgenerational programming of the female germline. EE therapy in prenatally stressed F1 offspring had no beneficial effects on uterine expression of inflammatory and endocrine markers for them or their future offspring.”

https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/24/4/3734 “Environmental Enrichment Promotes Transgenerational Programming of Uterine Inflammatory and Stress Markers Comparable to Gestational Chronic Variable Stress”


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Nrf2 Week #6: Phytochemicals

This 2023 review explored Nrf2 relationships with plant chemicals:

“This review focuses on possible mechanisms of Nrf2 activation by natural phytochemicals in preventing or treating chronic diseases, and regulating oxidative stress. Excess oxidative stress is closely related to many kinds of chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular diseases, cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes, obesity, and other inflammatory diseases.

Mitochondrial dysfunction and hyperglycemia lead to the massive production of ROS, which triggers molecular damage, inflammation, ferroptosis, insulin resistance, and β-cell dysfunction.

antioxidants-12-00236-g001

Crosstalk between Keap1-Nrf2-ARE pathway and other signaling pathways endows it with high complexity and significance in the multi-function of phytochemicals. Limited human data makes an urgent need to open the new field of phytochemical-original supplement application in human chronic disease prevention.”

https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3921/12/2/236 “The Regulatory Effect of Phytochemicals on Chronic Diseases by Targeting Nrf2-ARE Signaling Pathway”


Top ten mentions, not including references:

  • 21 Sulforaphane
  • 16 Broccoli
  • 9 Curcumin
  • 5 Resveratrol
  • 5 Green tea catechins
  • 4 Luteolin
  • 3 Garlic
  • 3 Soy isoflavones
  • 3 Lycopene
  • 3 Quercetin

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Nrf2 Week #4: Aging

Two 2023 reviews of Nrf2 and aging, starting with Nrf2-mitochondria interactions:

“We discuss molecular mechanisms of interactions between Nrf2 and mitochondria that influence the rate of aging and lifespan. Nrf2 activity positively affects both mitochondrial dynamics and mitochondrial quality control.

Nrf2 influences mitochondrial function through regulation of nuclear genome-encoded mitochondrial proteins and changes in the balance of ROS or other metabolites. In turn, multiple regulatory proteins functionally associated with mitochondria affect Nrf2 activity and even form mutual regulatory loops with Nrf2. These loops enable fine-tuning of cellular redox balance and, possibly, of the cellular metabolism as a whole.

mtDNA-encoded signal peptides interact with nuclear regulatory systems, first of all, Nrf2, and are possibly involved in regulation of the aging rate. Interactions between regulatory cascades that link programs ensuring maintenance of cellular homeostasis and cellular responses to oxidative stress are a significant part of both aging and anti-aging programs.

Understanding these interactions will be of great help in searching for molecular targets to counteract aging-associated diseases and aging itself. Future research on Nrf2 signaling and ability of various substances that activate the Nrf2 pathway to prevent age-associated chronic diseases will provide further insight into the role of Nrf2 activation as a possible longevity-promoting intervention.”

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1134/S0006297922120057 “Transcription Factor Nrf2 and Mitochondria – Friends or Foes in the Regulation of Aging Rate” (not freely available) Thanks to Dr. Gregory A. Shilovsky for providing a copy.


The second review evaluated whether Nrf2 is a master regulator of aging:

“This paper briefly presents main mechanisms of mammalian aging and roles of inflammation and oxidative stress in this process. Mechanisms of Nrf2 activity regulation, its involvement in aging and development of the senescence-associated secretory phenotype are also discussed.

The age-related decrease in Nrf2 activity is of universal interspecies character:

  • Rodents with high Nrf2 activity have a longer lifespan than rodents with low activity.
  • Genetic knockout of Nrf2 usually leads to the increased senescent phenotype in a variety of animal organs and tissues, and also reduces lifespan of female mice.
  • There are also opposite examples, where Nrf2 knockout in aging mice reduced iron ions deposition in the brain, lowered the level of oxidative damage in the striatum, and also alleviated age-related motor dysfunction.

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It would be incorrect to consider the effect of Nrf2 transcription factor at the organism level as exclusively antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and, ultimately, anti-aging. Nrf2 controls many genes, products of which have complex, pleiotropic effects on the body:

  • No experiments that use Nrf2 chemical inducers as anti-aging drugs have been performed so far.
  • Nrf2 is not involved in life extension caused by caloric restriction.
  • Epigenetic clocks do not reveal transcription factors activity of which changes with aging.

Aging is accompanied by changes in gene expression profiles, which are tissue- and species-specific. These changes only to a small extent include genes controlled by Nrf2. At the moment, it cannot be concluded that Nrf2 is the master regulator of the aging process.”

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1134/S0006297922120045 “Does Nrf2 Play a Role of a Master Regulator of Mammalian Aging?”


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Don’t eat yourself into disease, Part 2

This blog’s 1000th curation is a 2023 rodent study associating gut microbiota, behavior, memory, and food reward:

“Energy intake and energy expenditure is regulated by the hypothalamus, and is referred to as homeostatic regulation of food intake. The reward system is the non-homeostatic regulation of food intake – pleasure-related consumption of foods enriched in fat and sugar. The pleasure is encoded by dopamine release from dopaminergic neurons projecting from the ventral tegmental area to the striatum, the nucleus accumbens, and the prefrontal cortex.

Food reward can be divided into three components – liking, wanting, and learning:

  • Liking refers to food hedonic value;
  • Wanting to the motivational process to seek out and consume certain foods; and
  • Learning to reinforcing conditioning behavior associated with food intake stimulus.

We confirmed that obese mice have a dysregulation of the learning and the wanting components of  food reward. Our previous data showed that the liking component was transferable through fecal material transplantation.

We demonstrated that gut microbes play a role in the regulation of food reward, and could be responsible for compulsive behavior and excessive motivation to obtain sucrose pellets. Moreover, obese gut microbes affected dopaminergic and opioid markers involved in reward system.

We identified 33HPP (produced exclusively by gut bacteria) as particularly increased in mice recipients of gut microbes from obese mice. We were able to demonstrate its effects as key mediator of the gut-brain axis controlling the reward response to palatable food.”

https://microbiomejournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40168-023-01526-w “Obese-associated gut microbes and derived phenolic metabolite as mediators of excessive motivation for food reward”


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No exit

This 2023 rodent study investigated aging processes and gut microbiota in crowded conditions:

“Our study provides clear evidence that high-density crowding accelerates the aging process of Brandt’s voles. We also found that ‘high-density microbiota’ promote the aging-related phenotype in voles.

Because we minimized effects of direct fighting on mortality of voles, observed changes in lifespan in this study should mostly represent the natural aging processes of voles.

high-density survival

High density increased the level of stress hormone corticosterone, which disrupted gut microbiota composition by:

  • Decreasing abundance of anti-aging or anti-inflammatory bacterial species; and
  • Increasing the proportion of pathogenic bacteria.

This caused an increase in DNA oxidation and inflammation through upregulation of NF-kB and COX-2 pathways.

Although high-density relief and butyric acid administration interventions could reverse aging-related processes of adult voles, it remains unclear whether they could reverse the aging process in terms of lifespan.

Our results suggest that gut microbiota play a significant role in mediating aging-related processes of voles under high-density conditions, and can be used as a potential therapeutic target for treating stress-related diseases in humans.”

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.202205346 “Gut Microbiota is Associated with Aging-Related Processes of a Small Mammal Species under High-Density Crowding Stress”


I came across this study by it citing Reversing hair greying for effects of stress interventions.

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What do we know about human aging from mouse models?

Here is a 2021 rodent study and relevant parts from 3 of its 26 citing papers:

“A long line of evidence has established the laboratory mouse as the prime model of human aging. However, relatively little is known about detailed behavioral and functional changes that occur across their lifespan, and how this maps onto the phenotype of human aging.

To better understand age-related changes across the lifespan, we characterized functional aging in male C57BL/6J mice of five different ages (3, 6, 12, 18, and 22 months of age) using a multi-domain behavioral test battery. Assessment of functional aging in humans and mice: age-related patterns were determined based on representative data (Table 2), and then superimposed onto survival rate. (A) Body weight, (B) locomotor activity, (C) gait velocity, (D) grip strength, (E) trait anxiety, (F) memory requiring low attention level, and (G) memory requiring high attention level.

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These functional alterations across ages are non-linear, and patterns are unique for each behavioral trait. Physical function progressively declines, starting as early as 6 months of age in mice, while cognitive function begins to decline later, with considerable impairment present at 22 months of age.

Functional aging of male C57BL/6J mice starts at younger relative ages compared to when it starts in humans. Our study suggests that human-equivalent ages of mice might be better determined on the basis of its functional capabilities.”

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnagi.2021.697621/full “Functional Aging in Male C57BL/6J Mice Across the Life-Span: A Systematic Behavioral Analysis of Motor, Emotional, and Memory Function to Define an Aging Phenotype”


“Studies in mice show that physical function (i.e., locomotor activity, gait velocity, grip strength) begins to deteriorate around post-natal day (PND) 180, but cognitive functions (i.e., memory) do not exhibit impairment until roughly PND 660. Our results should be considered within the context of behavior changing throughout vole adulthood. Caution should be taken to avoid categorizing the oldest age group in our study as ‘elderly’ or ‘geriatric.'”

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0276897 “Behavioral trajectories of aging prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster): Adapting behavior to social context wanes with advanced age”


“We used adult mice ranging in age from 5-6 months, not enough to modify experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis progression. Mice are considered adult after 8 weeks; however, rapid growth for most biological processes is observed until 3 months of age, while past 6 months, mice might be affected by senescence.”

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2022.1036680/full “Age related immune modulation of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in PINK1 knockout mice”


“Locomotor activity and gait velocity of 12 months old male C57BL/6 correlates with an elderly human being aged 60 or older, supporting that the ~15 months old mice we used in our study were aged mice at the time of tissue collection.”

https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/23/20/12461 “Genomic Basis for Individual Differences in Susceptibility to the Neurotoxic Effects of Diesel Exhaust”


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Do broccoli sprouts treat gout and kidney stones?

This 2022 rodent study investigated glucoraphanin’s effects on reducing uric acid:

“Hyperuricemia is a chronic disease characterized by abnormally elevated serum uric acid levels. Sulforaphane could lower uric acid by decreasing urate synthesis and increasing renal urate excretion in hyperuricemic rats.

A hyperuricemia model was established by administering feedstuffs with 4% potassium oxonate and 20% yeast. Forty male Sprague–Dawley rats were randomly divided into the normal control, hyperuricemia, allopurinol, and sulforaphane groups. Animals were treated by oral gavage for six consecutive weeks, and then phenotypic parameters, metabolomic profiling, and metagenomic sequencing were performed.

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We identified succinic acid and oxoglutaric acid as critical host-gut microbiome co-metabolites. Sulforaphane improved diversity of microbial ecosystems and functions, as well as metabolic control of the kidney. Sulforaphane exerted its renoprotective effect through epigenetic modification of Nrf2 and interaction between gut microbiota and epigenetic modification in hyperuricemic rats.

Limitations of this study include:

  1. We used glucoraphanin bioactivated with myrosinase for our experiments. Future experiments may directly involve sulforaphane.
  2. Bioinformatics analysis resulted in speculations that require further experimental testing.
  3. Further investigation of interactions between microbiota and the host epigenome is still needed.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S209012322200251X “Sulforaphane-driven reprogramming of gut microbiome and metabolome ameliorates the progression of hyperuricemia”


It was a stretch to label treatment subjects as the “sulforaphane group” by claiming “Glucoraphanin (10 mg/kg) was metabolized to SFN by myrosinase as described in previous studies.” Both this and the referenced 2014 study “(RS)-glucoraphanin purified from Tuscan black kale and bioactivated with myrosinase enzyme protects against cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury in rats” measured glucoraphanin and myrosinase, but not sulforaphane.

A human equivalent to this study’s daily glucoraphanin intake of 10 mg / kg weight would be (.162 x 10 mg) x 70 kg = 113 mg. Whether 10 mg was dry or wet weight wasn’t disclosed.

If 10 mg was wet, 113 mg is a little more than twice our model clinical trial’s average glucoraphanin intake of 51 mg fresh weight from eating 30 grams / day of super sprouts. In April 2020’s Understanding a clinical trial’s broccoli sprout amount, a study coauthor said:

“We considered 30 g and 60 g to be 1/2 and 1 portion per day, respectively, of broccoli sprouts. When we carried out tests with consumers, previous to the bioavailability studies, higher amounts per day were not easy to consume and to get eaten by participants.”

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Broccoli sprouts activate the AMPK pathway, Part 4

Today someone viewed the 2020 Part 3 of Broccoli sprouts activate the AMPK pathway which lacked citations at the time. Checking again, here are three citing 2022 papers, starting with a review:

“Nrf2 is an important transcription factor that regulates expression of a large number of genes in healthy and disease states. Nrf2 regulates expression of several key components of oxidative stress, mitochondrial biogenesis, mitophagy, autophagy, and mitochondrial function in all organs of the human body, and in the peripheral and central nervous systems.

Overall, therapeutic drugs including sulforaphane that target Nrf2 expression and Nrf2/ARE pathway are promising. This article proposes additional research in Nrf2’s role within Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, and ischemic stroke in preclinical mouse models and humans with age-related neurodegenerative diseases.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1568163722001982 “Role of Nrf2 in aging, Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases” (not freely available) Thanks to Dr. P. Hemachandra Reddy for providing a copy.


One of the Part 3 study’s coauthors contributed to this very detailed review:

“Due to observed overlapping cellular responses upon AMPK or NRF2 activation and common stressors impinging on both AMPK and NRF2 signaling, it is plausible to assume that AMPK and NRF2 signaling may interdepend and cooperate to readjust cellular homeostasis.

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The outcome and underlying signaling events of AMPK-NRF2 crosstalk may diverge between:

  1. in vitro and in vivo studies (one cell type in isolation vs inter-organ crosstalk in living organisms);
  2. Different cell types/organs/organisms of different cultivation conditions, genetic background, age or sex;
  3. Different stress-regimens (chronic vs acute, nature of stress (lipotoxicity, redox stress, xenobiotic, starvation, etc));
  4. Different modes of Nrf2 or AMPK activation and inhibition (genetic vs pharmacological, constitutive vs transient/intermittent, systemic vs organ-specific, electrophilic vs PPI, allosteric vs covalent, or pan vs subtype-specific);
  5. Different target genes with distinct promoter and enhancer structure; or
  6. Different timing of activation.

The latter should deserve increased attention as Nrf2 is one of the most cycling genes under control of the circadian clock. Feeding behavior, metabolism and hence AMPK activity follow and substantiate the biological clock, indicating an entangled circadian regulation of metabolic and redox homeostasis.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S089158492200497X “AMPK and NRF2: Interactive players in the same team for cellular homeostasis?”


A third citing paper was a study of lens cells that provided an example of similar metformin effects noted in Part 2 of Broccoli sprouts activate the AMPK pathway:

“Loss of Nrf2 and Nrf2 antioxidant genes expression and activity in aging cells leads to an array of oxidative-induced deleterious responses, impaired function, and aging pathologies. This deterioration is proposed to be the primary risk factor for age-related diseases such as cataracts.

AMPK regulates energy at physiological levels during metabolic imbalance and stress. AMPK is a redox sensing molecule, and can be activated under cellular accumulation of reactive oxygen species, which are endogenously produced due to loss of antioxidant enzymes.

The therapeutic potential of AMPK activation has context-dependent beneficial effects, from cell survival to cell death. AMPK activation was a requisite for Bmal1/Nrf2-antioxidants-mediated defense, as pharmacologically inactivating AMPK impeded metformin’s effect.

Using lens epithelial cell lines (LECs) of human or mouse aging primary LECs along with lenses as model systems, we demonstrated that metformin could correct deteriorated Bmal1/Nrf2/ARE pathway by reviving AMPK-activation and transcriptional activities of Bmal1/Nrf2, resulting in increased antioxidants enzymatic activity and expression of Phase II enzymes. Results uncovered crosstalk between AMPK and Bmal1/Nrf2/antioxidants mediated by metformin for blunting oxidative/aging-linked pathobiology.”

https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/11/19/3021/htm “Obligatory Role of AMPK Activation and Antioxidant Defense Pathway in the Regulatory Effects of Metformin on Cellular Protection and Prevention of Lens Opacity”


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If you were given a lens to see clearly, would you accept it?

Two papers, starting with a 2022 rodent study of maternal behaviors’ effects on offspring physiologies:

Early life adversity (ELA) is a major risk factor for development of pathology. Predictability of parental care may be a distinguishing feature of different forms of ELA.

We tested the hypothesis that changes in maternal behavior in mice would be contingent on the type of ELA experienced, directly comparing predictability of care in limited bedding and nesting (LBN) and maternal separation (MS) paradigms. We then tested whether predictability of ELA environment altered expression of corticotropin-releasing hormone (Crh), a sexually-dimorphic neuropeptide that regulates threat-related learning.

MS was associated with increased expression of Crh-related genes in males, but not females. LBN primarily increased expression of these genes in females, but not males.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289522000595 “Resource scarcity but not maternal separation provokes unpredictable maternal care sequences in mice and both upregulate Crh-associated gene expression in the amygdala”


I came across this first study by it citing a republished version of 2005 epigenetic research from McGill University:

“Early experience permanently alters behavior and physiology. A critical question concerns the mechanism of these environmental programming effects.

We propose that epigenomic changes serve as an intermediate process that imprints dynamic environmental experiences on the fixed genome, resulting in stable alterations in phenotype. These findings demonstrate that structural modifications of DNA can be established through environmental programming and that – in spite of inherent stability of this epigenomic marker – it is dynamic and potentially reversible.”

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.31887/DCNS.2005.7.2/mmeaney “Environmental programming of stress responses through DNA methylation: life at the interface between a dynamic environment and a fixed genome”


This post commemorates the five-year anniversary of Dr. Arthur Janov’s death. Its title is taken from my reaction to his comment on Beyond Belief: Symptoms of hopelessness. Search his blog for mentions of the second paper’s coauthors, Drs. Meaney and Szyf.


Our lives are substantially a product of our parents’ actualized and unsatisfied needs. Our children and their children are reflections of us with our problems (unfelt needs) or elucidations (felt needs).

What if the price we pay for avoiding and pressuring down our feelings is: A wasted life?

What if the grand hypothesis worth proving is: For one’s life to have meaning, each individual has to regain their feelings?

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All about walnuts’ effects

Five 2022 papers focusing on walnuts, starting with a comparison of eight tree nuts:

“The aim of the present study was to examine 8 different popular nuts – pecan, pine, hazelnuts, pistachio, almonds, cashew, walnuts, and macadamia. Total content of phenolic compounds in nuts ranged from 5.9 (pistachio) to 432.9 (walnuts) mg/100 g.

Walnuts had the highest content of polymeric procyanidins, which are of great interest as important compounds in nutrition and biological activity, as they exhibit antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, cardio- and neuroprotective action. Walnuts are good sources of fatty acids, especially omega-3 and omega-6.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590157522002164 “Nuts as functional foods: Variation of nutritional and phytochemical profiles and their in vitro bioactive properties”


A second study compared the same eight tree nuts plus Brazil nuts and peanuts:

“The highest total content of all analyzed flavonoids was determined in walnuts (114.861 µg/g) with epicatechin the most abundant, while the lowest was in almonds (1.717 µg/g). Epicatechin has antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antitumor, and anti-diabetic properties. Epicatechin has beneficial effects on the nervous system, enhances muscle performance, and improves cardiac function.”

https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/27/14/4326/htm “The Content of Phenolic Compounds and Mineral Elements in Edible Nuts”


Next, two systematic reviews and meta-analyses of human studies:

“We carried out a systematic review of cohort studies and randomized controlled trials (RCTs) investigating walnut consumption, compared with no or lower walnut consumption, including those with subjects from within the general population and those with existing health conditions, published from 2017 to 5 May 2021.

  • Evidence published since 2017 is consistent with previous research suggesting that walnut consumption improves lipid profiles and is associated with reduced CVD risk.
  • Evidence pointing to effects on blood pressure, inflammation, hemostatic markers, and glucose metabolism remains conflicting.
  • Evidence from human studies showing that walnut consumption may benefit cognitive health, which is needed to corroborate findings from animal studies, is now beginning to accumulate.”

https://academic.oup.com/nutritionreviews/advance-article/doi/10.1093/nutrit/nuac040/6651942 “Walnut consumption and health outcomes with public health relevance – a systematic review of cohort studies and randomized controlled trials published from 2017 to present”


“We aimed to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of RCTs to thoroughly assess data concerning effects of walnut intake on selected markers of inflammation and metabolic syndrome in mature adults. Our findings showed that:

  • Walnut-enriched diets significantly decreased TG, TC, and LDL-C concentrations, while HDL-C levels were not significantly affected.
  • No significant changes were noticed on anthropometric, cardiometabolic, and glycemic indices after higher walnut consumption.
  • Inflammatory biomarkers did not record statistically significant results.”

https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3921/11/7/1412/htm “Walnut Intake Interventions Targeting Biomarkers of Metabolic Syndrome and Inflammation in Middle-Aged and Older Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials”


Finishing with a rodent study that gave subjects diabetes with a high-fat diet, then mixed two concentrations of walnut extract in with the treatment groups’ chow:

“This study was conducted to evaluate the protective effect of Gimcheon 1ho cultivar walnut (GC) on cerebral disorder by insulin resistance, oxidative stress, and inflammation in HFD-induced diabetic disorder mice. After HFD feed was supplied for 12 weeks, samples were orally ingested for 4 weeks to GC20 and GC50 groups (20 and 50 mg/kg of body weight, respectively).

  • Administration of GC improved mitochondrial membrane potential function, and suppressed oxidative stress in the brain.
  • GC inhibited hepatic and cerebral lipid peroxidation and the formation of serum AGEs, and increased serum antioxidant activity to improve HFD-induced oxidative stress.
  • The HFD group showed significant memory impairment in behavioral tests. On the other hand, administration of GC showed improvement in spatial learning and memory function.

walnut brain effects

Based on these physiological activities, GC showed protective effects against HFD-induced diabetic dysfunctions through complex and diverse pathways.”

https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/27/16/5316/htm “Walnut Prevents Cognitive Impairment by Regulating the Synaptic and Mitochondrial Dysfunction via JNK Signaling and Apoptosis Pathway in High-Fat Diet-Induced C57BL/6 Mice”


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Minds of their own

It’s the weekend, so it’s time for: Running errands? Watching sports? Other conditioned behavior?

Or maybe broadening our cognitive ability with Dr. Michael Levin’s follow-ups to his 2021 Basal cognition paper and 2020 Electroceuticals presentation with a 2022 paper and presentation starting around the 13:30 mark:

Michael Levin - Cell Intelligence in Physiological and Morphological Spaces

“A homeostatic feedback is usually thought of as a single variable such as temperature or pH. The set point has been found to be a large-scale geometry, a descriptor of a complex data structure.”


His 2022 paper Technological Approach to Mind Everywhere: An Experimentally-Grounded Framework for Understanding Diverse Bodies and Minds:

“It is proposed that the traditional problem-solving behavior we see in standard animals in 3D space is just a variant of evolutionarily more ancient capacity to solve problems in metabolic, physiological, transcriptional, and morphogenetic spaces (as one possible sequential timeline along which evolution pivoted some of the same strategies to solve problems in new spaces).

Developmental bioelectricity works alongside other modalities such as gene-regulatory networks, biomechanics, and biochemical systems. Developmental bioelectricity provides a bridge between the early problem-solving of body anatomy and the more recent complexity of behavioral sophistication via brains.

This unification of two disciplines suggests a number of hypotheses about the evolutionary path that pivoted morphogenetic control mechanisms into cognitive capacities of behavior, and sheds light on how Selves arise and expand.

While being very careful with powerful advances, it must also be kept in mind that existing balance was not achieved by optimizing happiness or any other quality commensurate with modern values. It is the result of dynamical systems properties shaped by meanderings of the evolutionary process and the harsh process of selection for survival capacity.”


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