UCLA study uncovers protein's trade-off in aging muscle repair

Researchers at UCLA have identified a protein that slows muscle repair in aging but enhances cell survival in mice. Blocking the protein improved healing speed in older mice, though it reduced long-term stem cell resilience. The findings suggest aging involves survival strategies rather than mere decline.

A new study from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), published in the journal Science, explores why aging muscles heal more slowly after injury. The research, conducted on mice, focused on muscle stem cells, which accumulate high levels of a protein called NDRG1 as they age. This protein, reaching 3.5 times higher levels in older cells compared to younger ones, dampens the mTOR signaling pathway, slowing cell activation and tissue repair.

To test NDRG1's role, scientists allowed mice to age naturally to the equivalent of about 75 human years and then inhibited the protein. Older muscle stem cells then activated more quickly, behaving like those from young mice and speeding up muscle healing after injury. However, this intervention led to fewer stem cells surviving over time, reducing the muscle's regeneration capacity after repeated injuries.

"It's counterintuitive, but the stem cells that make it through aging may actually be the least functional ones. They survive not because they're the best at their job, but because they're the best at surviving," said Dr. Thomas Rando, senior author and director of the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA. He likened young stem cells to sprinters—fast but not durable—and aged ones to marathon runners—slower but resilient.

The team, led by postdoctoral scholars Jengmin Kang and Daniel Benjamin, proposes a "cellular survivorship bias," where over time, only stress-resistant but slower-repairing cells persist. Rando noted that such changes may prevent complete stem cell depletion, drawing parallels to survival adaptations in nature during harsh conditions.

Funded by organizations including the National Institutes of Health and the NOMIS Foundation, the study highlights potential costs in anti-aging therapies. "There's no free lunch," Rando cautioned, emphasizing trade-offs in boosting regeneration.

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Realistic illustration of macrophages forming neuron-like connections with muscle fibers, sending calcium pulses to accelerate repair.
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Immune cells send neuron-like signals to jump-start muscle repair

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Researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center have found that certain macrophages, a type of immune cell, can form rapid, neuron-like connections with muscle fibers to speed healing. By delivering quick pulses of calcium into damaged muscle, these cells trigger repair-related activity within seconds. The findings, published online November 21, 2025, in Current Biology, could eventually inform new treatments for muscle injuries and degenerative conditions.

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory researchers report that engineered anti-uPAR CAR T cells cleared senescence-linked cells in mice, improving intestinal regeneration, reducing inflammation and strengthening gut barrier function. The approach also aided recovery from radiation-related intestinal injury and showed regenerative signals in experiments using human intestinal and colorectal cells, raising the possibility of future clinical trials.

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Researchers at The Rockefeller University have created a detailed cellular atlas of aging by analyzing nearly 7 million cells from 21 organs in mice. The study reveals that aging begins earlier than previously thought and occurs in a coordinated manner throughout the body. Findings highlight differences between males and females, along with potential targets for anti-aging therapies.

Scientists in China report that repairing defects in lysosomes—the cell’s waste‑disposal hubs—accelerated clearance of progerin in patient cells and reduced markers of cellular aging, pointing to a potential therapeutic target for Hutchinson‑Gilford progeria syndrome.

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Researchers at UCLA Health and UC San Francisco have identified a natural defense mechanism in brain cells that helps remove toxic tau protein, potentially explaining why some neurons resist Alzheimer's damage better than others. The study, published in Cell, used CRISPR screening on lab-grown human neurons to uncover this system. Findings suggest new therapeutic avenues for neurodegenerative diseases.

Mayo Clinic researchers have mapped a molecular circuit in alveolar type 2 lung cells that helps determine whether they rebuild tissue or fight infection. The study, published Oct. 14, 2025, in Nature Communications, suggests new paths for regenerative approaches in chronic lung conditions such as pulmonary fibrosis and COPD.

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University of Minnesota researchers report that older mice’s macrophages can become locked in an inflammatory state through an autocrine signaling loop involving the protein GDF3 and the transcription factors SMAD2/3. In experiments, genetic deletion of Gdf3 or drugs that interfered with the pathway reduced inflammatory responses and improved survival in older endotoxemia models, while human cohort data linked higher GDF3 levels with markers of inflammation.

 

 

 

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