Longevity & AgingArticle de rechercheAccès payant

Partial Reprogramming Reverses Mesenchymal Drift That Drives Aging and Disease

New research reveals how cellular identity loss accelerates aging and disease, but Yamanaka factors can reverse this process.

dimanche 29 mars 2026 1 vue
Publié dans Cell0 en appui7 citations au total
laboratory petri dishes containing cells under microscope illumination with visible cellular structures and research equipment in background

Résumé

Scientists discovered that aging and disease involve widespread "mesenchymal drift" - cells losing their specialized identity and becoming more generic. This drift correlates with disease progression and mortality risk across 40 human tissues and 20 diseases. Remarkably, partial reprogramming using Yamanaka factors can reverse this cellular aging process, restoring proper cell identity and rejuvenating tissues before cells become pluripotent stem cells.

Résumé détaillé

A groundbreaking study reveals why our cells lose their specialized functions as we age and how this process might be reversible. Researchers analyzed gene expression data from over 40 human tissues and 20 diseases, uncovering a phenomenon they termed "mesenchymal drift" - the widespread loss of cellular identity where specialized cells revert to a more primitive, generic state.

This mesenchymal drift appears to be a fundamental driver of aging and disease. The researchers found that as cells lose their specialized characteristics, they upregulate mesenchymal genes and alter their stromal cell populations. Importantly, increased mesenchymal drift correlated directly with disease progression, reduced patient survival, and elevated mortality risk across multiple conditions.

The most exciting discovery was that partial reprogramming using Yamanaka factors could reverse this aging process. Unlike full reprogramming that turns cells into embryonic-like stem cells, partial reprogramming restored cellular identity and rejuvenated the aging transcriptome without causing dedifferentiation. This occurred at both cellular and tissue levels, suggesting a potential therapeutic approach.

These findings provide crucial mechanistic insight into how partial reprogramming works and why it shows promise for treating age-related diseases. The research suggests that maintaining cellular identity might be key to healthy aging, and that controlled reprogramming could offer a path to reverse biological aging processes.

Principales conclusions

  • Mesenchymal drift occurs across 40+ human tissues and correlates with disease progression
  • Higher mesenchymal drift predicts reduced survival and increased mortality risk
  • Partial reprogramming reverses cellular aging before pluripotency induction
  • Yamanaka factors restore cellular identity and rejuvenate aging transcriptomes

Méthodologie

Researchers analyzed gene expression data from over 40 human tissues and 20 diseases to identify mesenchymal drift patterns. They then tested partial reprogramming interventions using Yamanaka factors to assess reversal of aging-related cellular changes.

Limites de l'étude

This summary is based on the abstract only, limiting detailed methodology and results analysis. The clinical translation timeline and safety profile of partial reprogramming interventions remain unclear.

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