Rebooting stem cells builds bigger muscles in aged mice

Researchers have shown that rejuvenating muscle stem cells from old mice leads to larger muscle growth and improved recovery after injury. The approach could one day help older people regain strength and mobility. Experiments demonstrated clear benefits in leg function and tissue repair.

Scientists at Duke University extracted muscle stem cells from aged mice, supplemented them with specific lipids in the lab, and then injected the treated cells back into injured muscles of other old mice. The treated cells produced new muscle fibres 45 per cent larger than those from untreated cells, and the mice showed better performance on treadmill and mobility tests within days.

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Illustration of abdominal fat cells related to aging and new fat generation.
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Study links age-related belly fat to a newly identified fat-progenitor cell state

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Researchers at City of Hope report that aging can spur the emergence of an age-enriched population of adipose progenitor cells that is especially prone to generating new fat cells in abdominal white fat. The work, published in Science, points to a signaling pathway that may help drive midlife increases in belly fat and could become a future therapeutic target.

Researchers at Texas A&M University have shown that mammals may possess dormant abilities to regrow complex body parts. A new two-step treatment redirected healing in mice away from scarring toward tissue regeneration. The approach restored bone, joints, ligaments and tendons after amputation.

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Researchers at UCLA have identified senescent immune cells, dubbed 'zombie' cells, that accumulate in aging livers and contribute to fatty liver disease. By eliminating these cells in mice, the team reversed liver damage and reduced body weight, even on an unhealthy diet. The findings, published in Nature Aging, suggest similar mechanisms may drive human liver conditions.

Researchers at Marshall University report that microscopic particles found in the gut lumen—known as exosomes—differ between young and old mice and can influence metabolism and gut-barrier function when transferred between animals. The findings, published in the journal Aging Cell, suggest these particles may help drive biological changes associated with aging, though the work is preclinical.

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Researchers in Japan have created new vitamin K compounds that are three times more effective than natural forms at turning stem cells into neurons. The work, published in 2025, targets diseases that destroy brain cells such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

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