Tomato Genetics: A Unexpected Journey Into a “Parallel Universe”

Tomato Genetics: A Unexpected Journey Into a “Parallel Universe”

Tomato Plant Genetics Art
Researchers at Michigan State University found that tomato plants utilize two separate metabolic pathways to produce acylsugars in roots and trichomes, offering new strategies for natural pest resistance in agriculture. Credit: SciTechDaily.com
In a new study recently published by Science Advances, Michigan State University researchers reveal an unexpected genetic revelation about the sugars found in “tomato tar,” shedding light on plant defense mechanisms and their potential applications in pest control.

Tomato tar, a familiar nuisance of avid gardeners, is the sticky, gold-black substance that clings to hands after touching the plant. It turns out that the characteristic stickiness of the substance serves an important purpose. It’s made of a type of sugar called acylsugar that acts as a natural flypaper for would-be pests. “Plants have evolved to make so many amazing poisons and other biologically active compounds,” said Michigan State researcher Robert Last, leader of the study. The Last lab specializes in acylsugars and the tiny, hair-like structures where they’re produced and stored, known as trichomes.

In a surprising discovery, researchers have found acylsugars, once thought to be found exclusively in trichomes, in tomato roots as well. This finding is a genetic enigma that raises as many questions as it does insights.

The objective of the MSU study was to learn about the origins and function of these root acylsugars. They found that not only do tomato plants synthesize chemically unique acylsugars in their roots and trichomes, but these acylsugars are produced through two parallel metabolic pathways. This is the equivalent of assembly lines in an auto factory making two different models of the same car, but never interacting.

MSU Tomato Seedlings
In Michigan State’s Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, tomato seedlings are grown for the Last lab’s research into the Solanaceae plant family, also known as nightshades. The researchers analyzed unique chemical differences between roots and shoots, both of which contained acylsugars. Credit: Connor Yeck/MSU
These findings are helping scientists gain a better understanding of the resilience and evolutionary story of Solanaceae, or nightshades, a sprawling family of plants that includes tomatoes, eggplants, potatoes, peppers, tobacco, and petunias.

They could also provide valuable information for researchers looking to develop molecules made by plants into compounds to help humanity. “From pharmaceuticals, to pesticides, to sunscreens, many small molecules that humans have adapted for different uses come from the arms race between plants, microbes, and insects,” Last said.

Roots and Shoots

Beyond key chemicals essential for growth, plants also produce a treasure trove of compounds that play a crucial role in environmental interactions. These can attract useful pollinators and are the first line of defense against harmful organisms.

“What’s so remarkable about these specialized metabolites is that they’re typically synthesized in highly precise cells and tissues,” said Rachel Kerwin, a postdoctoral researcher at MSU and first author of the latest paper.

“Take for instance acylsugars. You won’t find them produced in the leaves or stems of a tomato plant. These physically sticky defense metabolites are made right in the tip of the trichomes.”

When it was reported that acylsugars could be found in tomato roots as well, Kerwin took it as a call for old-fashioned genetic detective work.

Jaynee Hart, Rachel Kerwin and Robert Last
From left to right: Jaynee Hart, Rachel Kerwin and Robert Last pose in front of analytical equipment at Michigan State University’s Mass Spectrometry and Metabolomics Core. The team of researchers unraveled an evolutionary and genetic mystery in tomato plants. Credit: Connor Yeck/MSU

“The presence of these acylsugars in roots was fascinating and led to so many questions. How did this happen, how are they being made and are they different from the trichome acylsugars we’ve been studying?”

To begin tackling the evolutionary enigma, lab members collaborated with specialists at MSU’s Mass Spectrometry and Metabolomics Core and staff at the Max T. Rogers Nuclear Magnetic Resonance facility.

In comparing metabolites from tomato seedlings’ roots and shoots, a variety of differences appeared. The basic chemical makeup of the aboveground and belowground acylsugars were noticeably different, so much so that they could be defined as different classes of acylsugars entirely.

Breaking the Car

Last, a University Distinguished Professor in MSU’s College of Natural Science’s Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Department of Plant Biology, offers a useful analogy to explain how a geneticist approaches biology. “Imagine trying to figure out how a car works by breaking one component at a time,” he said. “If you flatten a car’s tires and notice the engine still runs, you’ve discovered a critical fact even if you don’t know what the tires exactly do.”

Switch out car parts for genes, and you get a clearer picture of the work accomplished by the Last lab to further crack the code on root acylsugars.

Looking at public genetic sequence data, Kerwin noticed that many of the genes expressed in tomato trichome acylsugar production had close relatives in roots. After identifying an enzyme believed to be the first step in root acylsugar biosynthesis, the researchers began “breaking the car.”

When they knocked out the root acylsugar candidate gene, root acylsugar production vanished, leaving trichome acylsugar production untouched.

Meanwhile, when the well-studied trichome acylsugar gene was knocked out, root acylsugar production carried on as usual.

These findings offered striking proof of a suspected metabolic mirroring.

“Alongside the aboveground acylsugar pathway we’ve been studying for years, here we find this second parallel universe that exists underground,” Last said.

“This confirmed we have two pathways co-existing in the same plant,” Kerwin added.

To drive home this breakthrough, Jaynee Hart, a postdoctoral researcher and second author on the latest paper, looked closer at the functions of trichome and root enzymes.

Just as trichome enzymes and the acylsugars they produce are a well-studied chemical match, she found a promising link between root enzymes and the root acylsugars as well.

“Studying isolated enzymes is a powerful tool for ascertaining their activity and drawing conclusions about their functional role inside the plant cell,” Hart explained.

These findings were further proof of the parallel metabolic pathways that exist in a single tomato plant.

“Plants and cars are so different, yet similar in that when you open the proverbial hood you become aware of the multitude of parts and connections that make them function. This work gives us new knowledge about one of those parts in tomato plants and prompts further research into its evolution and function and whether we can make use of it in other ways,” said Pankaj Jaiswal, a program director at the U.S. National Science Foundation, which funded the work.

“The more we learn about living things — from tomatoes and other crops to animals and microbes — the broader the opportunities to employ that learning to benefit society,” he added.

Clusters Within Clusters

The paper also reports a fascinating and unexpected twist concerned with biosynthetic gene clusters, or BGCs.

BGCs are collections of genes that are physically grouped on the chromosome and contribute to a particular metabolic pathway. Previously, the Last lab identified a BGC containing genes linked to trichome acylsugars in tomato plants. Kerwin, Hart, and their collaborators have now discovered the root-expressed acylsugar enzyme resides in the same cluster.

“Usually in BGCs, the genes are co-expressed in the same tissues and under similar conditions,” said Kerwin.“But here, we have two separate yet interlinked groups of genes. Some expressed in trichomes, and some expressed in roots.”

This revelation led Kerwin to dive into the evolutionary trajectory of Solanaceae species, with hopes of identifying when and how these two unique acylsugar pathways developed. Specifically, the researchers drew attention to a moment some 19 million years ago when the enzyme responsible for trichome acylsugars was duplicated. This enzyme would one day be responsible for the newly discovered root-expressed acylsugar pathway.

The exact mechanism that “switched on” this enzyme in roots remains unknown, paving the way for the Last lab to continue to unpack the evolutionary and metabolic secrets of the nightshade family.

“Working with Solanaceae provides so many scientific resources, as well as a strong community of researchers,” said Kerwin.

“Through their importance as crops and in horticulture, these are plants humans have cared about for thousands of years.”

For Last, these breakthroughs are also a reminder of the importance of natural pesticides, which defense metabolites such as acylsugars ultimately represent.

“If we find that these root acylsugars are effective at repelling harmful organisms, could they be bred into other nightshades, thereby helping plants grow without the need for harmful synthetic fungicides and pesticides?” Last asked.

“These are questions at the core of humanity’s pursuit of purer water, safer food and a reduced reliance on harmful synthetic chemicals.”

Reference: “Tomato root specialized metabolites evolved through gene duplication and regulatory divergence within a biosynthetic gene cluster” by Rachel E. Kerwin, Jaynee E. Hart, Paul D. Fiesel, Yann-Ru Lou, Pengxiang Fan, A. Daniel Jones and Robert L. Last, 24 April 2024, Science Advances.
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adn3991

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Sunflower Secrets Unveiled: Multiple Origins of Flower Symmetry Discovered

Sunflower Secrets Unveiled: Multiple Origins of Flower Symmetry Discovered

Sunflower Family Tree
A new sunflower family tree reveals that flower symmetry evolved multiple times independently. Species of the sunflower family with or without bilateral flower symmetry. Chrysanthemum lavandulifolium (upper left) and Artemisia annua (upper right) are closely related species from the same tribe; the former has bilaterally symmetric flowers (the rays) and the latter does not. Rudbeckia hirta (lower left) from the sunflower tribe has bilaterally symmetric flowers, and Eupatorium chinense (lower right) from the Eupatorieae tribe does not; these two tribes are closely related groups. A sunflower (center) shows flowers with bilateral symmetry (the large petal-like flowers in the outer row) and without (the small flowers in the inner rows). Credit: Guojin Zhang, Ma laboratory, Penn State

The sunflower family tree revealed that flower symmetry evolved multiple times independently, a process called convergent evolution, among the members of this large plant family, according to a new analysis. The research team, led by a Penn State biologist, resolved more of the finer branches of the family tree, providing insight into how the sunflower family — which includes asters, daisies, and food crops like lettuce and artichoke — evolved.

A paper describing the analysis and findings, which researchers said may help identify useful traits to selectively breed plants with more desirable characteristics, appeared online in the journal Plant Communication.

“Convergent evolution describes the independent evolution of what appears to be the same trait in different species, like wings in birds and bats,” said Hong Ma, Huck Chair in Plant Reproductive Development and Evolution, professor of biology in the Eberly College of Science at Penn State and the leader of the research team. “This can make it difficult to determine how closely related two species are by comparing their traits, so having a detailed family tree based on DNA sequence is crucial to understanding how and when these traits evolved.”

Advances in Sunflower Family Genealogy

The sunflower head, for example, is actually a composite composed of multiple much smaller flowers. While the head is generally radially symmetric — it can be divided into two equal halves in multiple directions like a starfish or a pie — the individual flowers can have different forms of symmetry. According to the new study, bilateral symmetry — where there is only one line that divides the flower into two equal halves — has evolved and been lost multiple times independently in sunflowers over evolutionary history. The researchers found that this convergent evolution is likely related to changes in the number of copies and the expression patterns of the floral regulatory gene, CYC2.

In recent years, many family trees for a group of related species have been built by extensively using transcriptomes, which are the genetic sequences of essentially all of the genes expressed by a species, the researchers explained. Transcriptomes are easier to acquire than high-quality whole-genome sequences for a species but are still difficult and costly to prepare and require fresh plant samples. To increase the number of species available for comparison the team turned to low-coverage genome sequences, which are produced through a process called genome skimming and are relatively inexpensive and easy to prepare, even from dried plant samples.

“To get an accurate whole-genome sequence for a species, each letter of its DNA alphabet must be read — or covered — multiple times to minimize errors,” Ma said. “For the purposes of building a family tree, we show in this paper that we can get away with lower coverage genome sequences. This allowed us to increase the number of species in our analysis, which, in turn, allowed us to resolve more of the finer branches on the sunflower family tree.”

The team used a combination of publicly available and newly generated transcriptomes, along with a large number of newly obtained skimmed genomes, for a total of 706 species with representatives from 16 subfamilies, 41 tribes, and 144 subtribe-level groups in the sunflower family. The subfamilies are major subdivisions of the family, while the tribes and subtribe can contain one or more of genera, which is the classification level just above the species.

“Previous versions of the sunflower family tree had established the relationships among most of the subfamilies and many tribes, which are equivalent to the main branches of a tree,” Ma said. “With our increased sample size, we were able to resolve more of the smaller branches and twigs at the subtribe and genus level. This higher-resolution tree allowed us to reconstruct where and when traits like flower symmetry evolved, demonstrating that bilateral symmetry must have evolved many times independently.”

Molecular Insights and Future Directions

The team also studied the molecular evolution of genes involved in flower development among sunflowers. They found that one of these genes, CYC2, which is found in multiple copies in the genomes of each species, was activated in species with bilaterally symmetric flowers, suggesting that it might be part of the molecular basis for the convergent evolution of this trait. To further test this, the team performed experiments to quantify CYC2 gene expression in the flowers of species with different types of symmetry.

“Our analysis showed a clear relationship between CYC2 expression and flower symmetry, suggesting that changes in how these genes are used in various sunflower species is likely involved in the convergent evolution observed in the family,” Ma said. “The sunflower family is one of the two largest families of flowering plants containing over 28,000 species, including many economically important agricultural and horticultural species. Understanding how these species are related to one another allows us to determine how and when their traits evolved. This knowledge could also be used to identify useful traits that could be bred into domesticated species from closely related wild ones.”

Reference: “Nuclear phylogenomics of Asteraceae with increased sampling provides new insights into convergent morphological and molecular evolution” by Guojin Zhang, Junbo Yang, Caifei Zhang, Bohan Jiao, Jose L. Panero, Jie Cai, Zhi-Rong Zhang, Lian-Ming Gao, Tiangang Gao and Hong Ma, 25 February 2024, Plant Communications.
DOI: 10.1016/j.xplc.2024.100851

In addition to Ma, the research team includes Guojin Zhang at Penn State; Junbo Yang, Jie Cai, Zhi-Rong Zhang, and Lian-Ming Gao at the Kunming Institute of Botany in Kunming, China; Caifei Zhang at the Wuhan Botanical Garden and Sino-Africa Joint Research Centre in Wuhan, China; Bohan Jiao and Tiangang Gao at the State Key Laboratory of Plant Diversity and Specialty Crops in Beijing, China; and Jose L. Panero at the University of Texas, Austin.

Funding from the Eberly College of Science and the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences at Penn State, the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the Large-scale Scientific Facilities of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the National Natural Science Foundation of China supported this research.

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Newly Found Gene Enhances Photosynthesis, Boosts Plant Height

Newly Found Gene Enhances Photosynthesis, Boosts Plant Height

Chimera Photosynthesis Regulating Gene Origins
A team of scientists discovered a naturally occurring gene in the poplar tree that enhances photosynthetic activity and significantly boosts plant growth. The gene, Booster, contains DNA from two associated organisms found within the tree, and from a protein known as Rubisco that is essential to photosynthesis. Credit: Andy Sproles, ORNL/U.S. Dept. of Energy

The BOOSTER gene in poplar trees boosts photosynthesis and biomass, with potential applications for improving crop yields.

Researchers from the Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, in collaboration with the Center for Bioenergy Innovation at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, have discovered a gene in poplar trees that improves photosynthesis and can boost tree height.

Chloroplasts are the principal cell structures that house the photosynthetic apparatus converting light energy into the chemical energy that fuels plant growth. Specifically, the Rubisco protein captures carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Scientists have for years been working on ways to boost the amount of Rubisco in plants for greater crop yield and absorption of atmospheric CO2.

“Historically, a lot of studies have focused on steady-state photosynthesis where every condition is kept constant. However, this is not representative of the field environment in which light can vary all the time,” said Steven Burgess, an assistant professor of integrative biology at Illinois. “Over the last few years, these dynamic processes have been considered to be more important and are not well understood.”

Greenhouse Booster Plants
From left, ORNL’s Biruk Feyissa holds a five-month-old poplar tree expressing high levels of the BOOSTER gene, while colleague Wellington Muchero holds a tree of the same age with lower expression of the gene. Credit: Genevieve Martin/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

Unlocking Genetic Potential in Poplar Trees

In the new study, the researchers focused on poplar since it is a fast-growing crop and a leading candidate for making biofuels and bioproducts. They sampled ~1,000 trees in outdoor research plots and analyzed their physical characteristics and genetic makeup to perform a genome-wide association study. The team used the GWAS population to look for candidate genes that had been linked to photosynthetic quenching, a process that regulates how quickly plants adjust between sun and shade and dissipate excess energy from too much sun to avoid damage.

One of the genes, which the researchers named BOOSTER, was unusual because it is unique to poplar and although it is in the nuclear genome contains a sequence which originated from the chloroplast.

The team discovered that this gene was able to increase the Rubisco content and subsequent photosynthetic activity, resulting in taller polar plants when grown in greenhouse conditions. In field conditions, scientists found that genotypes with higher expression of BOOSTER were up to 37% taller, increasing biomass per plant. The team also inserted BOOSTER in a different plant, Arabidopsis, or thale cress, resulting in an increase in biomass and seed production. This finding indicates the wider applicability of BOOSTER to potentially trigger higher yields in other plants.

“It is an exciting first step, although these are small-scale experiments, and there is a lot of work to be done, if we can reproduce the results on a large scale, this gene has the potential to increase biomass production in crops,” Burgess said.

Next steps in the research could encompass testing in other bioenergy and food plants, with researchers recording plant productivity in varying growing conditions to analyze long-term success. They will also be investigating the other genes that were identified in the GWAS study that could contribute to crop improvement.

For more on this study, see Breakthrough Gene Supercharges Plant Growth and Boosts Photosynthesis.

Reference: “An orphan gene BOOSTER enhances photosynthetic efficiency and plant productivity” by Biruk A. Feyissa, Elsa M. de Becker, Coralie E. Salesse-Smith, Jin Zhang, Timothy B. Yates, Meng Xie, Kuntal De, Dhananjay Gotarkar, Margot S.S. Chen, Sara S. Jawdy, Dana L. Carper, Kerrie Barry, Jeremy Schmutz, David J. Weston, Paul E. Abraham, Chung-Jui Tsai, Jennifer L. Morrell-Falvey, Gail Taylor, Jin-Gui Chen, Gerald A. Tuskan and Wellington Muchero, 3 December 2024, Developmental Cell.
DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2024.11.002

The research was supported by CBI and CABBI, both sponsored by the DOE Office of Science Biological and Environmental Research Program.

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Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green calls out Machine Gun Kelly amid split

Megan Fox’s ex Brian Austin Green calls out Machine Gun Kelly amid split

Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green calls out Machine Gun Kelly amid split

The celebrity couple were married for over a decade before finalizing their divorce in 2021

Megan Fox’s ex Brian Austin Green has spoken out on the news of his pregnant ex-wife’s reported break-up from Machine Gun Kelly.

Fox recently revealed that she and Machine Gun Kelly (MGK) – real name Colson Barker – were expecting their first child together.

The baby will be the Jennifer’s Body actor’s fourth and MGK’s second.

It has since been reported that the celebrity pair have gone their separate ways once more, having called off their engagement last year.

According to reports, the reason for their split was because the singer was found to have been texting other women, as per Page Six.

In the wake of their reported split, 90210 and Desperate Housewives star Green was asked for his thoughts on the matter – and he claimed to TMZ that he had no idea that Fox and MGK had split.

Megan Fox and Brian Austin Green share three kids together (Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic)

Megan Fox and Brian Austin Green share three kids together (Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic)

In a video, the TMZ reporter then explained that Transformers star had reportedly found inappropriate texts on MGK’s phone.

Green went on to ask: “How old is he? He’s in his 30s isn’t he?”

“In your 30s… like, grow up,” the actor continued. “You know, she’s pregnant.”

When asked if he was worried about his ex and the mother of his three kids, Green said he only wants ‘the best’ for Fox, their children and her unborn baby.

Green also said of it all: “I’m heartbroken about it because I know she’s been so excited and the kids are so excited for life to change, and all of that.”

He added that if it’s true about MGK’s texts, then it’s a ‘tragic situation’.

“I wouldn’t wish that on anybody,” the actor further weighed in.

Fox and MGK are said to have called things quits for good (Gotham/GC Images)

Fox and MGK are said to have called things quits for good (Gotham/GC Images)

Both Fox and MGK are yet to publicly address their rumored break-up.

The two stars are thought to have started dating in June 2020, having met on the set of Midnight In The Switchgrass earlier that year.

MGK then popped the question to Fox in January 2022, but they called off their engagement a year later.

They were reported to have rekindled their romance afterwards though, but it isn’t though they were got re-engaged.

In March 2024, Fox said she couldn’t confirm the ‘status of the relationship’, though did confirm that their engagement had ended.

“I think that what I’ve learned from being in this relationship is that it’s not for public consumption, so I think as of now. I don’t have a comment on like the status of the relationship per se.” she told Alex Cooper on the Call Her Daddy at the time.

“What I can say is that is what I refer to as being my twin soul and there will always be a tether to [MGK] no matter what. I can’t say for sure what the capacity will be, but I will always be connected to him somehow.”
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Boiling Alive? Scientific Proof That Crabs Feel Pain Sparks Calls for Humane Seafood Practices

Boiling Alive? Scientific Proof That Crabs Feel Pain Sparks Calls for Humane Seafood Practices

Shore Crab With Electrodes Attached
Electrodes measuring brain activity were attached to a shore crab, which was then subjected to mechanical and chemical stimuli. Credit: Eleftherios Kasiouras

University of Gothenburg researchers have provided scientific proof that shore crabs feel pain, urging a reevaluation of how shellfish are treated under EU animal welfare laws. This evidence supports the development of less painful methods for killing shellfish.

In our pursuit of improving the welfare of animals we consume, certain creatures are often overlooked. Researchers at the University of Gothenburg are now focusing on decapod crustaceans, which include shellfish delicacies such as prawns, lobsters, crabs, and crayfish. Currently, shellfish are not protected under animal welfare legislation in the EU, but this might be about to change—for a good reason, according to researchers.

Their study, recently published in the journal Biology, provides the first evidence that painful stimuli are sent to the brain of shore crabs, offering more proof that crustaceans feel pain.

Eleftherios Kasiouras
Eleftherios Kasiouras, PhD student at the Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg. Credit: Eleftherios Kasiouras

“We need to find less painful ways to kill shellfish if we are to continue eating them. Because now we have scientific evidence that they both experience and react to pain,” said Lynne Sneddon, zoophysiologist at the University of Gothenburg.

Several research groups have previously conducted a number of observational studies on crustaceans, in which they were subjected to mechanical impact, electric shocks, or acids to soft tissues such as the antennae. These crustaceans reacted by touching the exposed area or trying to avoid the danger in repeated experiments, leading researchers to assume that they feel pain.

Pain Receptors in the Soft Tissues

The researchers at the University of Gothenburg are the first to carry out neurobiological studies by measuring the activity in the brain of a shore crab, through an EEG style measurement.

“We could see that the crab has some kind of pain receptors in its soft tissues, because we recorded an increase in brain activity when we applied a potentially painful chemical, a form of vinegar, to the crab’s soft tissues. The same happened when we applied external pressure to several of the crab’s body parts,” says Eleftherios Kasiouras, PhD student at the University of Gothenburg and lead author of the study.

Lynne Sneddon
Lynne Sneddon, Senior Lecturer in Zoophysiology at the Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg. Credit: David Wolfenden

The activity of the central nervous system in the brain was measured in the crab when the soft tissues of claws, antennae, and legs were subjected to some form of stress. The responses show that shore crabs must have some form of pain signaling to the brain from these body parts. The pain response was shorter and more powerful in the case of physical stress than in the case of chemical stress, which lasted longer.

Advocating for Humane Treatment

“It is a given that all animals need some kind of pain system to cope by avoiding danger. I don’t think we need to test all species of crustaceans, as they have a similar structure and therefore similar nervous systems. We can assume that shrimps, crayfish and lobsters can also send external signals about painful stimuli to their brain which will process this information,” says Kasiouras.

The researchers point out that we need to find more humane ways to handle and even kill crustaceans. At present, it is allowed to cut up a crustacean alive, unlike the mammals we eat.

“We need more research to find less painful ways to kill shellfish,” says Sneddon.

Reference: “Putative Nociceptive Responses in a Decapod Crustacean: The Shore Crab (Carcinus maenas)” by Eleftherios Kasiouras, Peter C. Hubbard, Albin Gräns and Lynne U. Sneddon, 21 October 2024, Biology.
DOI: 10.3390/biology13110851

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Stress Accelerates Aging of the Immune System

Stress Accelerates Aging of the Immune System

Woman Face Aging Concept
New research shows stress accelerates the aging of the immune system and could help explain disparities in age-related health.

Traumatic life events and everyday stress prematurely weaken body’s mix of immune cells.

It is widely recognized that as people start getting up in the years, their immune system weakens. A stark example is the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, where the elderly face a much higher mortality rate than the young.

This process of gradual deterioration of the immune system brought on by natural age advancement is called immunosenescence. Yet you may know people that are quite elderly, but in great health, or vice versa, someone who is relatively young, but still prone to infections. What could account for differences in immune system strength in people that are the same age?

Stress — in the form of traumatic events, job strain, everyday stressors, and discrimination — accelerates aging of the immune system, potentially increasing a person’s risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and illness from infections such as COVID-19, according to a new University of Southern California (USC) study.

The research, published yesterday (June 13, 2022) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could help explain disparities in age-related health, including the unequal toll of the pandemic, and identify possible points for intervention.

“As the world’s population of older adults increases, understanding disparities in age-related health is essential. Age-related changes in the immune system play a critical role in declining health,” said lead study author Eric Klopack, a postdoctoral scholar in the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology. “This study helps clarify mechanisms involved in accelerated immune aging.”

As people age, the immune system naturally begins a dramatic downgrade, a condition called immunosenescence. With advanced age, a person’s immune profile weakens, and includes too many worn-out white blood cells circulating and too few fresh, “naive” white blood cells ready to take on new invaders.

Potential Problems Relating to Stress and the Immune System

Immune aging is associated not only with cancer, but with cardiovascular disease, increased risk of pneumonia, reduced efficacy of vaccines, and organ system aging.

But what accounts for drastic health differences in same-age adults? USC researchers decided to see if they could tease out a connection between lifetime exposure to stress — a known contributor to poor health — and declining vigor in the immune system.

“Age-related changes in the immune system play a critical role in declining health.” Eric Klopack

 

 

 

They queried and cross-referenced enormous data sets from University of Michigan’s Health and Retirement Study, a national longitudinal study of the economic, health, marital, family status, and public and private support systems of older Americans.

To measure exposure to various types of social stress, the researchers analyzed responses from a national sample of 5,744 adults over the age of 50. They answered a questionnaire designed to assess respondents’ experiences with social stress, including stressful life events, chronic stress, everyday discrimination, and lifetime discrimination.

Blood samples from the participants were then analyzed through flow cytometry, a lab technique that counts and classifies blood cells as they pass one by one in a narrow stream in front of a laser.

As expected, people with higher stress scores had older-seeming immune profiles, with lower percentages of fresh disease fighters and higher percentages of worn-out white blood cells. The association between stressful life events and fewer ready-to-respond, or naive, T cells remained strong even after controlling for education, smoking, drinking, BMI, and race or ethnicity.

Some sources of stress may be impossible to control, but the researchers say there may be a workaround.

T-cells — a critical component of immunity — mature in a gland called the thymus, which sits just in front of and above the heart. As people age, the tissue in their thymus shrinks and is replaced by fatty tissue, resulting in reduced production of immune cells. Past research suggests that this process is accelerated by lifestyle factors like poor diet and low exercise, which are both associated with social stress.

“In this study, after statistically controlling for poor diet and low exercise, the connection between stress and accelerated immune aging wasn’t as strong,” said Klopack. “What this means is people who experience more stress tend to have poorer diet and exercise habits, partly explaining why they have more accelerated immune aging.”

Stress and the Immune System: Impact of Diet and Exercise

Improving diet and exercise behaviors in older adults may help offset the immune aging associated with stress.

Additionally, cytomegalovirus (CMV) may be a target for intervention. CMV is a common, usually asymptomatic virus in humans and is known to have a strong effect on accelerating immune aging. Like shingles or cold sores, CMV is dormant most of the time but can flare up, especially when a person is experiencing high stress.

In this study, statistically controlling for CMV positivity also reduced the connection between stress and accelerated immune aging. Therefore, widespread CMV vaccination could be a relatively simple and potentially powerful intervention that could reduce the immune aging effects of stress, the researchers said.

Reference: “Social stressors associated with age-related T lymphocyte percentages in older US adults: Evidence from the US Health and Retirement Study” by Eric T. Klopack, Eileen M. Crimmins, Steve W. Cole, Teresa E. Seeman and Judith E. Carroll, 13 June 2022, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2202780119

In addition to Klopack, other authors include Eileen Crimmins, a University Professor and the AARP Chair in Gerontology at the USC Leonard Davis School; and Steve Cole and Teresa Seeman of UCLA.

The study was supported by grants from the National Institute on Aging (P30AG017265, U01AG009740).

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How Justin Bieber 'delayed' Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco's engagement announcement for months

How Justin Bieber ‘delayed’ Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco’s engagement announcement for months

How Justin Bieber 'delayed' Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco's engagement announcement for months

A source claims Selena Gomez delayed announcing her engagement to Benny Blanco – and it’s a very sad theory but would make sense

A source claims Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco got engaged in August and the reason they held off publicly announcing the news is allegedly to do with Justin Bieber.

Selena Gomez announced her engagement to Benny Blanco in a post shared to Instagram yesterday (December 12).

However, a source has since come forward to claim the Only Murders in the Building star got engaged to the producer months prior but was worried it may clash with some other news.

Gomez took to her Instagram page yesterday to share the news, sharing four images.

The first shows her hand and ring; the second shows her sitting in a garden on a rug looking at her ring; the third a selfie with Gomez smiling down, showing her hand and ring to the camera; and the fourth and final picture of the singer in the arms of Blanco, him kissing her on the side of the head as she shows her hand to the camera beaming.

The caption reads: “Forever begins now..”

However, while the announcement was shared yesterday, that doesn’t mean Blanco popped the question recently, a source has since claimed.

Selena Gomez revealed she's engaged in a post to Instagram (Instagram/ @selenagomez)

Selena Gomez revealed she’s engaged in a post to Instagram (Instagram/ @selenagomez)

A source – allegedly an ‘insider’ on the matter – told the Mail Online that Gomez and Blanco actually became engaged in August.

So why wait until December to tell the world? Well, first off, just because someone is in the public eye doesn’t mean they’re required to tell the world information about their life as soon as it happens.

But the insider claims Gomez also allegedly held off as a result of ex-partner Justin Bieber and partner Hailey Bieber announcing the birth of their first child in August.

The source claims Gomez ‘didn’t want her engagement to be tied to Bieber in any way’ because she ‘knew that there would be stories accusing her of getting engaged to turn attention away from Justin’s baby or that people would claim that she did this to one up him’.

While it’s not been confirmed, the idea of withholding the announcement out of fear of backlash on social media would make sense, Gomez having previously spoken out about the extremely damaging effects of internet trolls on her mental wellbeing.

Both Hailey Bieber and Selena Gomez have previously spoken out against nasty comments being shared online ( Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)

Both Hailey Bieber and Selena Gomez have previously spoken out against nasty comments being shared online ( Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)

Unable to let sleeping dogs lie and everyone get on with their lives, some social media users have long speculated about an alleged feud between Gomez and the Biebers as a result of the past relationship – it’s called moving on, everyone.

And so bad did some of the hateful comments become targeting the Biebers specifically, Gomez once took to TikTok to speak out.

The Only Murders in the Building actor wrote: “Please be kind and consider others’ mental health. My heart has been heavy, and I only want good for everyone. All my love.”

Hailey also spoke out in the days following Gomez becoming a target of severe trolling, writing: “If you’re leaving mean or rude comments on my behalf on anyone’s posts, just know that I don’t want that, nor do I ever or will I ever support or condone hateful, mean, or nasty comments. Doing that is not supporting me.

“If you are participating in that you are a part of a culture that I want no part of. Please be nice or don’t say anything.”
How Justin Bieber ‘delayed’ Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco’s engagement announcement for months Read More
Where You Live – A Surprising Factor That Could Be Making You Age Faster

Where You Live – A Surprising Factor That Could Be Making You Age Faster

Abstract Aging Concept
A new study from McMaster University suggests that living in materially and socially deprived urban areas and experiencing depressive symptoms could independently contribute to accelerated biological aging, as determined by two DNA methylation-based estimators. The research did not find that neighborhood deprivation amplified the effect of depressive symptoms on biological aging, indicating that these two factors affect aging through different mechanisms.

According to a recent study led by researchers from McMaster University, residing in economically and socially disadvantaged urban neighborhoods and feeling depressed could accelerate your aging.

The study, which was published on June 5 in The Journals of Gerontology, Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, demonstrated that both living in urban regions characterized by significant disparities in resources and social opportunities, as well as having symptoms of depression, are independently linked with early biological aging. This correlation persists even after taking into account personal health and behavior-related risk factors such as chronic illnesses and detrimental health habits.

Parminder Raina, a professor in the Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact at McMaster University, led the research team, which included investigators from the Netherlands, Norway, and Switzerland.

Parminder Raina
Parminder Raina, professor, Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact at McMaster University, lead principal investigator of the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging and the study’s senior author. Credit: McMaster University

“Our study used two DNA methylation-based estimators, known as epigenetic clocks, to examine aging at the cellular level and estimate the difference between chronological age and biological age,” said Divya Joshi, the study’s first author and a research associate in the Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact at McMaster.

“Our findings showed that neighborhood deprivation and depressive symptoms were positively associated with acceleration of the epigenetic age estimated using the DNAm GrimAge clock. This adds to the growing body of evidence that living in urban areas with higher levels of neighborhood deprivation and having depression symptoms are both associated with premature biological aging.”

Depressive symptoms in the study were measured using a 10-item standardized depression scale. The researchers found an acceleration in the risk of death by one month for every point increase in the depressive symptom score. They theorized that emotional distress caused by depression may result in more biological wear and tear and dysregulation of physiological systems, which in turn could lead to premature aging.

The researchers assessed neighborhood material and social deprivation using two indices that were developed by the Canadian Urban Environmental Health Research Consortium (CANUE) based on 2011 census.

Social deprivation reflects the presence of fewer social resources in the family and community, and material deprivation is an indicator of people’s inability to access goods and conveniences of modern life, such as adequate housing, nutritious food, a car, high-speed internet, or a neighborhood with recreational facilities.

The researchers found an increase in the risk of death by almost one year for those exposed to greater neighborhood deprivation compared to lower neighborhood deprivation.

The study did not find that neighborhood deprivation amplified the effect of depressive symptoms on epigenetic age acceleration.

“Our results showed that the effect of neighborhood deprivation on epigenetic age acceleration was similar regardless of depression symptoms, suggesting that depression influences epigenetic age acceleration through mechanisms unrelated to neighborhood deprivation,” Joshi said.

The research examined epigenetic data from 1,445 participants enrolled in the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA), a research platform following more than 50,000 participants who were between the ages of 45 to 85 when recruited.

“Longitudinal studies, like the CLSA, are important to confirm associations like those found in this study,” said Raina, the study’s senior author and lead principal investigator of the CLSA.

“By following the same group of participants for 20 years, we will be able to determine whether epigenetic changes are stable or reversible over time. We will also gain insight into the mechanisms that are leading to accelerated epigenetic aging.”

Reference: “Association of Neighborhood Deprivation and Depressive Symptoms With Epigenetic Age Acceleration: Evidence From the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging” by Divya Joshi, Ph.D., Frank J van Lenthe, Ph.D., Martijn Huisman, Ph.D., Erik R Sund, Ph.D., Steinar Krokstad, Ph.D., Mauricio Avendano, Ph.D. and Parminder Raina, Ph.D., 5 June 2023, The Journals of Gerontology Series A.
DOI: 10.1093/gerona/glad118

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Longevity Breakthrough: New Protein Discovery Could Be the Key to Healthier Aging

Longevity Breakthrough: New Protein Discovery Could Be the Key to Healthier Aging

Clock Aging Time Old
Researchers found MANF aids cellular cleanup, potentially offering new treatments for age-related diseases and healthier aging.

New research found that the protein MANF helps cells manage toxic protein clumps, improving cellular health and potentially aiding treatments for age-related diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

Researchers at McMaster University have uncovered a previously unidentified cell-protective role of a protein, potentially paving the way for new treatments for age-related diseases and promoting healthier aging.

The team has found that a class of protective proteins known as MANF plays a role in the process that keep cells efficient and working well.

The findings appear in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Our cells make proteins and discard them after they perform their jobs. This efficient, continuous maintenance process is known as cellular homeostasis. However, as we age, our cells’ ability to keep up declines.

Cells can create proteins incorrectly, and the cleanup process can become faulty or overwhelmed. As a result, proteins can clump together, leading to a harmful buildup that has been linked to such diseases as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

“If the cells are experiencing stress because this protein aggregation has started, the endoplasmic reticulum, which is where proteins are made and then released, gets the signal to stop making these proteins,” explains biology professor Bhagwati Gupta, who supervised the research.

“If it can’t correct the problem, the cell will die, which ultimately leads to degeneration of the neurons and then neurodegenerative diseases that we see.”

MANF’s Role in Cellular Maintenance

Previous studies, including one from McMaster, had shown that MANF protects against increased cellular stress. The team set out to understand how this happens by studying microscopic worms known as C. elegans. They created a system to manipulate the amount of MANF in C. elegans.

C. elegans Examined Under a Microscope MANF Protein
C. elegans examined under a microscope. The yellow and purple dots are the regions where MANF protein is located. Credit: McMaster University

“We could literally see where MANF was expressed in the worms because they are translucent. We could see it in all different tissues. Within these tissues, MANF was present in structures known as lysosomes which are associated with lifespan and protein aggregation,” said Shane Taylor, now a post-doctoral fellow at the University of British Columbia who worked on the project for his PhD while at McMaster.

Activating the Natural Cellular Clean-Up System

The team discovered that MANF plays a key role in the cell’s disposal process by helping to break down the accumulated proteins, keeping cells healthier and clutter-free.

Increasing MANF levels also activates a natural clean-up system within cells, helping them function better for longer.

“Although our research focused on worms, the findings uncover universal processes. MANF is present in all animals, including humans. We are learning fundamental and mechanistic details that could then be tested in higher systems,” said Taylor.

To develop MANF as a potential therapy, researchers want to understand what other players MANF interacts with.

“Discovering MANF’s role in cellular homeostasis suggests that it could be used to develop treatments for diseases that affect the brain and other parts of the body by targeting cellular processes, clearing out these toxic clumps in cells, and maintaining their health,” said Gupta.

“The central idea of aging research is basically can we make the processes better and more efficient. By understanding how MANF works and targeting its function, we could develop new treatments for age-related diseases. We want to live longer and healthier. These kinds of players could help that.”

Reference: “The neurotrophic factor MANF regulates autophagy and lysosome function to promote proteostasis in Caenorhabditis elegans” by Shane K. B. Taylor, Jessica H. Hartman and Bhagwati P. Gupta, 17 October 2024, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2403906121

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'Refreshingly funny' Netflix show with 100% Rotten Tomatoes rating stars Friends' Lisa Kudrow as viewers can't get enough

‘Refreshingly funny’ Netflix show with 100% Rotten Tomatoes rating stars Friends’ Lisa Kudrow as viewers can’t get enough

'Refreshingly funny' Netflix show with 100% Rotten Tomatoes rating stars Friends' Lisa Kudrow as viewers can't get enough

Fans have hailed the two-season show a ‘masterpiece’

A Netflix comedy-drama starring Lisa Kudrow has earned a perfect Rotten Tomatoes score – but you might never have heard of it.

The sitcom legend has starred in a number of exciting films and TV shows since Friends ended its 10-year run in 2004.

From voicing a TV executive owl in Netflix’s Bojack Horseman to appearing in fantasy-comedy The Good Place, I personally love seeing Kudrow pop up on my screen.

And Kudrow’s latest series, No Good Deed, has dropped on Netflix today (December 12).

Directed by Dead To Me’s Liz Feldman, the eight-parter tells the story of three families vying to buy the very same 1920s Spanish style villa that they think will solve all their problems.

Lisa Kudrow stars opposite Mae Martin and Adrian Lukis (Netflix)

Lisa Kudrow stars opposite Mae Martin and Adrian Lukis (Netflix)

But fans might have let one of Kudrow’s top-rated shows slip under their radar.

The 61-year-old starred in a British drama series that was adored by fans and scored a perfect 100 percent from Rotten Tomatoes critics.

Called Feel Good, the show debuted in 2020 and ran for two rollercoaster seasons.

You can watch the trailer below.

Created by non-binary comedian Mae Martin and writer Joe Hampson, it sees Martin play a fictionalised version of themself.

Set in London, Martin navigates their comedy career, a new relationship and the pendulum swing of addiction and sobriety.

Kudrow plays Martin’s mom Linda, while You’s Charlotte Ritchie is Martin’s girlfriend George.

Rotten Tomatoes’ critics consensus read, for season one: “An intimate portrait of addiction and love, Feel Good is at once sweetly charming, uncomfortably complicated, and completely worth falling for.”

A similarly glowing review for season two was given, which read: “Feel Good’s second season is at once sharp and soft, a bittersweet examination of love and life that will leave viewers wanting more from Mae Martin ASAP.”

Meanwhile, fans hailed the series ‘refreshingly funny,’ as one admitted: “I didn’t want this show to end.”

Mae Martin in Feel Good (Netflix)

Mae Martin in Feel Good (Netflix)

A second summed up: “A cleverly and beautiful written series. Funny, sad, stressful and captivating all at the same time.”

A third wrote: “Such an honest, hilarious, and yet painfully real depiction of trauma, PTSD, addiction, abuse, love, and relationships.

“Mae Martin has truly created a masterpiece with this series.”

Both seasons of Feel Good are available to stream now on Netflix.

‘Refreshingly funny’ Netflix show with 100% Rotten Tomatoes rating stars Friends’ Lisa Kudrow as viewers can’t get enough Read More