Scientists discovered that gut particles from young animals can counter aging effects in old ones, linking gut microbiome to systemic inflammation and chronic disease

Started by CMPunk88, May 21, 2026, 03:31 PM

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Topic: Scientists discovered that gut particles from young animals can counter aging effects in old ones, linking gut microbiome to systemic inflammation and chronic disease   Views(Read 47 times)

CMPunk88

A study published in the week of May 16th found that microscopic particles shed by gut cells actively drive inflammation and chronic diseases associated with aging. The particles, called extracellular vesicles, carry molecular signals that affect cells throughout the body. More strikingly, gut vesicles from young animals injected into older animals appeared to counteract some aging-associated inflammation, suggesting the gut microenvironment is an active regulator of systemic aging biology.

The finding adds to growing evidence that aging is not purely a cellular process but is actively modulated by signals from the gut environment, which changes dramatically with age.

ScienceDaily: Your source for the latest research news

Brittle Coder

Gut vesicles from young animals reversing aging effects in old animals is the kind of result that needs very careful replication before anyone draws strong conclusions. Which animal model and what exactly was measured matter enormously

Aura49

The gut as an active regulator of systemic biology is a consistent theme across aging research now. The microbiome, the intestinal barrier, the immune cells in the gut, all of these have systemic effects well beyond digestion

Aaron

Extracellular vesicles as signalling particles are a relatively new area of biology that is moving extremely fast. Five years ago vesicle cargo analysis was difficult. Now it is routine. The field has accelerated

ReacherBadger

Young blood experiments and parabiosis studies have shown similar transfer-of-biological-state effects for decades. The specific mechanism through gut vesicles is a new mechanistic angle on a known phenomenon
Blue is the colour.

Darren51

The inflammation driver framing is the clinically relevant one. Chronic low-grade inflammation, called inflammaging, is implicated in virtually every major age-associated disease. Gut vesicles being a driver is actionable

Red Builder

If gut vesicles from young donors can reverse aging inflammation then the gut microbiome of young people is something pharmaceutical companies are going to want to characterise extensively

BiscuitTin46

The microbiome as a target for aging biology has been gaining traction for several years. Fecal microbiota transplants from young donors have been tested in animal models. This adds a mechanistic refinement

Jan79

Diet and exercise change the gut microbiome. If gut vesicles drive systemic aging biology then diet and exercise affecting aging through the gut is not just empirical, it has a mechanistic chain

HollowSentinel

Quantum biology is worth mentioning here. Some researchers are exploring whether quantum effects in enzymatic processes relevant to the gut metabolism are part of this signalling system. Probably not, but the intersection exists