Wistar Scientists Discover Link Between Leaky Gut and Accelerated Biological Aging
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星期五, 二月 23, 2024
Methylation, Dysbiosis, Culture, Penn Center, Health, Bacteria, University, Subtypes of HIV, Life Length, Wistar Institute, Bangladesh Technical Education Board, Ileum, Infection, NIH, AIDS, Glass, Metabolomics, Nucleotide, DSM-IV codes, Biomedical Research, HIV/AIDS research, Wistar, University of Pittsburgh, DNA, Immune system, National Institutes of Health, Leiden University Medical Center, Weill Cornell Medicine, Hannum, Research, Inflammation, Blood, Ageing, Cancer, Cell biology, Microbiome, Rush University, HIV, DNA methylation, Vaccine
Dr. Abdel-Mohsen investigates what drives this rapid aging and how to create ways to slow down biological aging and improve health.
Key Points:
- Dr. Abdel-Mohsen investigates what drives this rapid aging and how to create ways to slow down biological aging and improve health.
- A prime suspect in this aging puzzle is the gut microbiome and its potential leakage into the bloodstream.
- The Abdel-Mohsen lab investigates how gut leakage can impact the immune system and lead to chronic inflammation, which may accelerate aging.
- Their analysis revealed a significant connection between disrupted gut microbiomes, increased intestinal permeability (leaky gut), and faster biological aging.