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Rejuvenating effects of young extracellular vesicles in aged rats and in cellular models of human senescence

Lilian Grigorian Shamagian, Russell G. Rogers, Kristin Luther, David Angert, Antonio Echavez, Weixin Liu, Ryan Middleton, Travis J. Antes, Jackelyn Valle, Mario Fourier, Liz Sanchez, Eva Jaghatspanyan, Javier Mariscal, Rui Zhang, Eduardo Marbán

Scientific Reports · 2023 · ▲ 28 citations

Abstract

Rejuvenation of an old organism was achieved in heterochronic parabiosis experiments, implicating different soluble factors in this effect. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are the secretory effectors of many cells, including cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) with demonstrated anti-senescent effect. 1. To determine the role of EVs (versus other blood fractions) on the rejuvenating effect of the young blood. 2. To evaluate the anti-aging properties of therapeutically administered EVs secreted by young-CDCs in an old organism. Neonatal blood fractioned in 4 components (whole blood, serum, EV-depleted serum and purified EVs) was used to treat old human cardiac stromal cells (CSPCs). CDCs were generated from neonatal rat hearts and the secreted CDC-EVs were purified. CDC-EVs were then tested in naturally-aged rats, using monthly injections over 4-months period. For validation in human samples, pediatric CDC-EVs were tested in aged human CSPCs and progeric fibroblasts. While the purified EVs reproduced the rejuvenating effects of the whole blood, CSPCs treated with EV-depleted serum exhibited the highest degree of senescence(definition). Treatment with young CDC-EVs induce structural and functional improvements in the heart, lungs, skeletal muscle, and kidneys of old rats, while favorably modulating glucose metabolism and anti-senescence pathways. Lifespan was prolonged. EVs secreted by young CDCs exert broad-ranging anti-aging effects in aged rodents and in cellular models of human senescence. Our work not only identifies CDC-EVs as possible therapeutic candidates for a wide range of age-related pathologies, but also raises the question of whether EVs function as endogenous modulators of senescence.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/s41598-023-39370-5
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2026-06-23 MST

Cite this

APA
Shamagian, L.G., Rogers, R.G., Luther, K., Angert, D., Echavez, A., Liu, W., Middleton, R., Antes, T.J., Valle, J., Fourier, M., Sanchez, L., Jaghatspanyan, E., Mariscal, J., Zhang, R., &amp; Marbán, E. (2023). Rejuvenating effects of young extracellular vesicles in aged rats and in cellular models of human senescence. <em>Scientific Reports</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-39370-5
Vancouver
Shamagian LG, Rogers RG, Luther K, Angert D, Echavez A, Liu W, et al. Rejuvenating effects of young extracellular vesicles in aged rats and in cellular models of human senescence. Scientific Reports. 2023. doi:10.1038/s41598-023-39370-5.
BibTeX
@article{lilian2023Rejuve, title = {Rejuvenating effects of young extracellular vesicles in aged rats and in cellular models of human senescence}, author = {Lilian Grigorian Shamagian and Russell G. Rogers and Kristin Luther and David Angert and Antonio Echavez and Weixin Liu and Ryan Middleton and Travis J. Antes and Jackelyn Valle and Mario Fourier and Liz Sanchez and Eva Jaghatspanyan and Javier Mariscal and Rui Zhang and Eduardo Marbán}, journal = {Scientific Reports}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1038/s41598-023-39370-5}, }

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