News Release

Mayo Clinic researchers reduce stem cell dysfunction and metabolic disease in aged mice

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Mayo Clinic

ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Mayo Clinic researchers have taken what they hope will be the first step toward preventing and reversing age-related stem cell dysfunction and metabolic disease. That includes diabetes, which affects 12.2 million Americans age 60 and older, according to the National Council on Aging. In this study, researchers discovered methods for reducing these conditions in naturally aged mice. Their findings appear in the online journal eLife.

"Our work supports the possibility that by using specific drugs that target senescent cells -- cells that contribute to frailty and disease associated with age -- we could stop human senescent cells from releasing toxic proteins that are contributing to diabetes and breakdowns in stem cells in older individuals," says James Kirkland, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Mayo Clinic Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging and senior author of the study.

Researchers from the Center on Aging found that human senescent fat cells release a protein called activin A that impairs the function of fat tissue stem cells and fat tissue. They discovered an activin A increase in the blood and fat tissue of the aged mice.

Treatment with Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor drugs in aged mice, equivalent to 80-year-old people, decreased the amounts of activin A and partially reversed the fat tissue insulin resistance that contributes to diabetes in old age. In aged mice that are engineered to express a drug-activated gene in their senescent cells (called INK-ATTAC mice) treatment triggering the gene removed senescent cells, decreased activin A and increased the proteins that promote insulin sensitivity and reduce diabetes. This paralleled effects of the JAK inhibitor in normal, naturally aged mice.

"The treated animals had improved glucose and insulin tolerance tests, tests that indicate the severity of diabetes," Dr. Kirkland says. "Our work suggests that targeting senescent cells or their products could be a promising avenue for delaying, preventing, alleviating or treating age-related stem cell and tissue dysfunction and metabolic disease."

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The research was supported by National Institutes of Health grants AG13925, AG041122, AG31736, AG044396, DK50456 and AG46061; The Connor Group; the Glenn, Ted Nash Long Life, and Noaber Foundations; and a Glenn/American Federation for Aging Research Postdoctoral Fellowship for Translational Research on Aging.

Others on the research team are: Ming Xu, Ph.D., Allyson Palmer, Husheng Ding, Ph.D., Megan Weivoda, Ph.D., Tamar Pirtskhalava, Ph.D., Thomas White, Ph.D., Anna Sepe, M.D., Kurt Johnson, Michael Stout, Ph.D., Nino Giorgadze, Michael Jensen, M.D., Nathan LeBrasseur, Ph.D., and Tamara Tchkonia, Ph.D., all of Mayo Clinic.

About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit organization committed to medical research and education, and providing expert, whole-person care to everyone who needs healing. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org/about-mayo-clinic, or http://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/.


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