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Impacts of systemic milieu on cerebrovascular and brain aging: insights from heterochronic parabiosis, blood exchange, and plasma transfer experiments

Aging is a complex biological process that detrimentally affects the brain and cerebrovascular system, contributing to the pathogenesis of age-related diseases like vascular cognitive impairment and dementia (VCID) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). While cell-autonomous mechanisms that occur within cells, independent of external signals from neighboring cells or systemic factors, account for some aspects of aging, they cannot explain the entire aging process. Non-autonomous, paracrine and endocrine, pathways also play a crucial role in orchestrating brain and vascular aging. The systemic milieu modulates aging through pro-geronic and anti-geronic circulating factors that mediate age-related decline or confer rejuvenative effects. This review explores the impact of systemic factors on cerebrovascular and brain aging, with a particular focus on findings from heterochronic parabiosis, blood exchange, and plasma transfer experiments. We discuss how these factors influence fundamental cellular and molecular processes of aging and impact cerebrovascular endothelial function, neurovascular coupling mechanisms, blood-brain barrier integrity, neuroinflammation, capillary density, and amyloid pathologies, with significant consequences for cognitive function. Additionally, we address the translational potential and challenges of modifying the systemic milieu to promote brain health and prevent age-related cognitive impairment.

Date Published: May 23, 2025

Authors: Rafal Gulej 1 2 3, Roland Patai 1 2 3, Anna Ungvari 4 5, Attila Kallai 6 7 8, Stefano Tarantini 1 2 3 9, Andriy Yabluchanskiy 1 2 3 9, Derek M Huffman 10 11 12, Michael J Conboy 13, Irina M Conboy 13, Mika Kivimäki 14 15, Anna Csiszar 1 2 3 9 16, Zoltan Ungvari 1 2 3 9

Link: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40407975/

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