Paper
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content
2

Counteracting age-related VEGF signaling insufficiency promotes healthy aging and extends life span

Authors
M. Grunewald,S. Kumar
H. Sharife,E. Volinsky,A. Gileles-Hillel,T. Licht,A. Permyakova,L. Hinden,S. Azar,Y. Friedmann,P. Kupetz,R. Tzuberi,A. Anisimov,K. Alitalo,M. Horwitz,S. Leebhoff,O. Z. Khoma,R. Hlushchuk,V. Djonov,R. Abramovitch,J. Tam,E. Keshet,Myriam Grunewald,Kari Alitalo,Saran Kumar,Husni Sharife,Alex Gileles‐Hillel,Tamar Licht,Anna Permyakova,Liad Hinden,Shahar Azar,Yael Friedmann,Andrey Anisimov,Mara Horwitz,Shira Leebhoff,Oleksiy-Zakhar Khoma,Ruslan Hlushchuk,Valentin Djonov,Rinat Abramovitch,Joseph Tam
+38 authors
,Eli Keshet
Journal
Published
Jul 29, 2021
Show more
Save
TipTip
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content
2
TipTip
Save
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content

Abstract

Aging is an established risk factor for vascular diseases, but vascular aging itself may contribute to the progressive deterioration of organ function. Here, we show in aged mice that vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling insufficiency, which is caused by increased production of decoy receptors, may drive physiological aging across multiple organ systems. Increasing VEGF signaling prevented age-associated capillary loss, improved organ perfusion and function, and extended life span. Healthier aging was evidenced by favorable metabolism and body composition and amelioration of aging-associated pathologies including hepatic steatosis, sarcopenia, osteoporosis, "inflammaging" (age-related multiorgan chronic inflammation), and increased tumor burden. These results indicate that VEGF signaling insufficiency affects organ aging in mice and suggest that modulating this pathway may result in increased mammalian life span and improved overall health.

Paper PDF

This paper's license is marked as closed access or non-commercial and cannot be viewed on ResearchHub. Visit the paper's external site.