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Multicellular life evolved from simple unicellular organisms that could replicate indefinitely, being essentially ageless. At this point, life split into two fundamentally different cell types: the immortal germline representing an unbroken lineage of cell division with no intrinsic endpoint and the mortal soma, which ages and dies. In this review, we describe the germline as clock-free and the soma as clock-bound and discuss aging with respect to three DNA-based cellular clocks (telomeric, DNA methylation, and transposable element). The ticking of these clocks corresponds to the stepwise progressive limitation of growth and regeneration of somatic cells that we term somatic restriction. Somatic restriction acts in opposition to strategies that ensure continued germline replication and regeneration. We thus consider the plasticity of aging as a process not fixed to the pace of chronological time but one that can speed up or slow down depending on the rate of intrinsic cellular clocks. We further describe how germline factor reprogramming might be used to slow the rate of aging and potentially reverse it by causing the clocks to tick backward. Therefore, reprogramming may eventually lead to therapeutic strategies to treat degenerative diseases by altering aging itself, the one condition common to us all.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes12050611 | DOI Listing |
Nurs Open
September 2025
Faculty of Nursing, Universitas Pelita Harapan, Jakarta, Indonesia.
Background: Being a global profession, having evolved differently across different geographical areas, and with increasing global migration, nursing is well positioned to undertake comparative research to facilitate understanding and identify areas for development. Despite this, little is known about comparative research use in nursing, and there is little guidance for researchers on how to approach it. With increasingly sophisticated approaches, there is a need to understand how comparative analysis is currently being used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adv Nurs
September 2025
College of Nursing, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, USA.
Aims: To explore the lived experiences of intensive care nurses caring for patients with limited English proficiency.
Design: A hermeneutic, interpretive phenomenological design was used.
Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with intensive care nurses recruited through purposive sampling.
Plant Cell Environ
September 2025
Max-Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Jena, Germany.
The time elapsed between carbon fixation into nonstructural carbohydrates (NSC) and their use to grow tree structural tissues can be estimated by C ages. Reported C-ages indicate that NSC used to grow root tissues (growth NSC) can vary from < 1 year to decades. To understand the controls of this variability, we compared C-ages of leaf, branch, and root tissues from two conifers (Larix decidua, Pinus mugo) in a control valley site and an alpine treeline ecotone where low temperatures restrict tree growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDevelopment
September 2025
Regenerative Medicine Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI), Ottawa, ON, K1H 8L6, Canada.
During development, neural progenitor cells modify their output over time to produce different types of neurons and glia in chronological sequences. Epigenetic processes have been shown to regulate neural progenitor potential, but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood. Here, we generated retina-specific conditional knockouts (cKOs) in the key nucleosome remodeller Chd4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2025
Department of Prehistory and Archaeology, University of Granada, Granada, Spain.
The archaeological excavations undertaken at the Chalcolithic necropolis of Los Milanes have revealed a previously unknown variability in funerary practices in the south-eastern Iberia. For the first time, a megalithic tomb housed a large funerary deposit (28,740 bone fragments) of exclusively cremated human bone remains. For a comprehensive characterization of the funerary ritual, a cutting-edge multi-proxy approach has been undertaken including the osteological study of cremated bone remains, radiocarbon chronology, Fourier-Transform Infrared spectroscopy in Attenuated Total Reflectance mode (FTIR-ATR), and carbon, oxygen and strontium isotope analyses.
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