logo
AI-Assisted Technique Can Measure and Track Aging Cells

AI-Assisted Technique Can Measure and Track Aging Cells

Associated Press7 hours ago
NEW YORK, July 7, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- A combination of high-resolution imaging and machine learning, also known as artificial intelligence (AI), can track cells damaged from injury, aging, or disease, and that no longer grow and reproduce normally, a new study shows.
These senescent cells are known to play a key role in wound repair and aging-related diseases, such as cancer and heart disease, so tracking their progress, researchers say, could lead to a better understanding of how tissues gradually lose their ability to regenerate over time or how they fuel disease. The tool could also provide insight into therapies for reversing the damage.
Led by NYU Langone Health Department of Orthopedic Surgery researchers, the study included training a computer system to help analyze animal cells damaged by increasing concentrations of chemicals over time to replicate human aging. Cells continuously confronted with environmental or biological stress are known to senesce, meaning they stop reproducing and start to release telltale molecules indicating that they have suffered injury.
Publishing in the journal Nature Communications online July 7, the researchers' AI analysis revealed several measurable features connected to the cell's control center (nucleus), that, when taken together, closely tracked with the degree of senescence in the tissue or group of cells. This included signs that the nucleus had expanded, had denser centers or foci, and had become less circular and more irregular in shape. Its genetic material also stained lighter than normal with standard chemical dyes.
Further testing confirmed that cells with these characteristics were indeed senescent, showing signs that they had stopped reproducing, had damaged DNA, and had densely packed enzyme-storing lysosomes. The cells also demonstrated a response to existing senolytic drugs.
From their analysis, researchers created what they term a nuclear morphometric pipeline (NMP) that uses the nucleus's changed physical characteristics to produce a single senescent score to describe a range of cells. For example, groups of fully senescent cells could be compared to a cluster of healthy cells on a scale from minus 20 to plus 20.
To validate the NMP score, the researchers then showed that it could accurately distinguish between healthy and diseased mouse cells from young to older mice, age 3 months to more than 2 years. Older cell clusters had significantly lower NMP scores than younger cell clusters.
The researchers also tested the NMP tool on five kinds of cells in mice of different ages with injured muscle tissue as it underwent repair. The NMP was found to track closely with changing levels of senescent and nonsenescent mesenchymal stem cells, muscle stem cells, endothelial cells, and immune cells in young, adult, and geriatric mice. For example, use of the NMP was able to confirm that senescent muscle stem cells were absent in control mice that were not injured, but present in large numbers in injured mice immediately after muscle injury (when they help initiate repair), with gradual loss as the tissue regenerated.
Final testing showed that the NMP could successfully distinguish between healthy and senescent cartilage cells, which were 10 times more prevalent in geriatric mice with osteoarthritis than in younger, healthy mice. Osteoarthritis is known to progressively worsen with age.
'Our study demonstrates that specific nuclear morphometrics can serve as a reliable tool for identifying and tracking senescent cells, which we believe is key to future research and understanding of tissue regeneration, aging, and progressive disease,' said study senior investigator Michael Wosczyna, PhD. Wosczyna is an assistant professor in the Department of Orthopedic Surgery at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine.
Wosczyna says his team's study confirms the NMP's broad application for study of senescent cells across all ages and differing tissue types, and in a variety of diseases.
He says the team plans further experiments to examine use of the NMP in human tissues, as well as combining the NMP with other biomarker tools for examining senescence and its various roles in wound repair, aging, and disease.
The researchers say their ultimate goal for the NMP, for which NYU has filed a patent application, is to use it to develop treatments that prevent or reverse negative effects of senescence on human health.
'Our testing platform offers a rigorous method to more easily than before study senescent cells and to test the efficacy of therapeutics, such as senolytics, in targeting these cells in different tissues and pathologies,' said Wosczyna, who plans to make the NMP freely available to other researchers.
'Existing methods to identify senescent cells are difficult to use, making them less reliable than the nuclear morphometric pipeline, or NMP, which relies on a more commonly used stain for the nucleus,' said study co-lead investigator Sahil Mapkar, BS, Mapkar is a doctoral candidate at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering.
Funding for the study was provided by National Institutes of Health grant R01AG053438 and the Department of Orthopedic Surgery at NYU Langone.
Besides Wosczyna and Makpar, NYU Langone researchers involved in this study are co-lead investigators Sarah Bliss, and Edgar Perez Carbajal, and study co-investigators Sean Murray, Zhiru Li, Anna Wilson, Vikrant Piprode, Youjin Lee, Thorsten Kirsch, Katerina Petroff, and Fengyuan Liu.
About NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone Health is a fully integrated health system that consistently achieves the best patient outcomes through a rigorous focus on quality that has resulted in some of the lowest mortality rates in the nation. Vizient Inc. has ranked NYU Langone No. 1 out of 115 comprehensive academic medical centers across the nation for three years in a row, and U.S. News & World Report recently placed nine of its clinical specialties among the top five in the nation. NYU Langone offers a comprehensive range of medical services with one high standard of care across seven inpatient locations, its Perlmutter Cancer Center, and more than 320 outpatient locations in the New York area and Florida. With $14.2 billion in revenue this year, the system also includes two tuition-free medical schools, in Manhattan and on Long Island, and a vast research enterprise.
Media Contact
David March
212-404-3528
[email protected]
STUDY LINK
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-60975-z
STUDY DOI
10.1038/s41467-025-60975-z
View original content to download multimedia: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ai-assisted-technique-can-measure-and-track-aging-cells-302498942.html
SOURCE NYU Langone Health System
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Franklin W. Stahl, 95, Dies; Helped Create a ‘Beautiful' DNA Experiment
Franklin W. Stahl, 95, Dies; Helped Create a ‘Beautiful' DNA Experiment

New York Times

time22 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Franklin W. Stahl, 95, Dies; Helped Create a ‘Beautiful' DNA Experiment

Franklin W. Stahl, a molecular biologist who helped create a methodology to confirm how DNA replicates that was so elegant it has been remembered for more than five decades as 'the most beautiful experiment in biology,' died on April 2 at his home in Eugene, Ore. He was 95. The cause was congestive heart failure, his son Andy Stahl said. His death was not widely reported at the time, and there was no announcement about it from the University of Oregon in Eugene, where he was a professor and researcher. At his death, Dr. Stahl was an emeritus professor of molecular biology and genetics at the university's Institute of Molecular Biology. He had been at the university since 1959. Dr. Stahl's name and that of his collaborator, Matthew Meselson, were immortalized by the Meselson-Stahl Experiment, which is referenced in biology textbooks and taught in molecular genetics courses worldwide. In 2015, 'Helix Spirals,' a musical tribute to the experiment, was composed by Augusta Read Thomas and performed by a string quartet in Boston. The two biologists proved a theory advanced by the Nobel Prize winners James Watson and Francis Crick, who discovered DNA's helical structure in 1953. Watson and Crick posited in the journal Nature that DNA replicates in a so-called semi-conservative fashion. In 1958, Dr. Meselson and Dr. Stahl, postdoctoral fellows in Linus Pauling's laboratory at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., proved that Watson and Crick were correct, by using an experiment that was celebrated for its design, execution and results. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

RFK Jr. promoted a food company he says will make Americans healthy. Their meals are ultraprocessed
RFK Jr. promoted a food company he says will make Americans healthy. Their meals are ultraprocessed

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

RFK Jr. promoted a food company he says will make Americans healthy. Their meals are ultraprocessed

WASHINGTON (AP) — Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Monday praised a company that makes $7-a-pop meals that are delivered directly to the homes of Medicaid and Medicare enrollees. He even thanked Mom's Meals for sending taxpayer-funded meals 'without additives" to the homes of sick or elderly Americans. The spreads include chicken bacon ranch pasta for dinner and French toast sticks with fruit or ham patties. 'This is really one of the solutions for making our country healthy again,' Kennedy said in the video, posted to his official health secretary account, after he toured the company's Oklahoma facility last week. But an Associated Press review of Mom's Meals menu, including the ingredients and nutrition labels, shows that the company's offerings are the type of heat-and-eat, ultraprocessed foods that Kennedy routinely criticizes for making people sick. The meals contain chemical additives that would render them impossible to recreate at home in your kitchen, said Marion Nestle, a nutritionist at New York University and food policy expert, who reviewed the menu for The AP. Many menu items are high in sodium, and some are high in sugar or saturated fats, she said. 'It is perfectly possible to make meals like this with real foods and no ultra-processing additives but every one of the meals I looked at is loaded with such additives,' Nestle said. 'What's so sad is that they don't have to be this way. Other companies are able to produce much better products, but of course they cost more.' Mom's Meals do not have the artificial, petroleum dyes that Kennedy has pressured companies to remove from products, she noted. Mom's Meals said in an emailed response that its food products 'do not include ingredients that are commonly found in ultra-processed foods.' The company does not use synthetic food dyes, high fructose corn syrup, certain sweeteners or synthetic preservatives that are banned in Europe, said Teresa Roof, a company spokeswoman. The meals are a 'healthy alternative' to what many people would find in their grocery stores, said Andrew Nixon, U.S. Health and Human Services spokesman, in response to questions about Mom's Meals. Mom's Meals is one of several companies across the U.S. that deliver 'medically tailored' at-home meals. The meal programs are covered by Medicaid for some enrollees, including people who are sick with cancer or diabetes, as well as some older Americans who are enrolled in certain Medicare health insurance plans. Patients recently discharged from the hospital can also have the meals delivered, according to the company's website. It's unclear how much federal taxpayers spend on providing meals through Medicaid and Medicare every year. An investigation by STAT news last year found that some states were spending millions of dollars to provide medically tailored meals to Medicaid enrollees that were marketed as healthy and 'dietician approved." But many companies served up meals loaded with salt, fat or sugar — all staples of an unhealthy American's diet, the report concluded. Defining ultraprocessed foods can be tricky. Most U.S. foods are processed, whether it's by freezing, grinding, fermentation, pasteurization or other means. Foods created through industrial processes and with ingredients such as additives, colors and preservatives that you couldn't duplicate in a home kitchen are considered the most processed. Kennedy has said healthier U.S. diets are key to his vision to 'Make America Healthy Again.' His call for Americans to increase whole foods in their diets has helped Kennedy build his unique coalition of Trump loyalists and suburban moms who have branded themselves as 'MAHA." In a recent social media post where he criticized the vast amount of ultraprocessed foods in American diets, Kennedy urged Americans to make healthier choices. 'This country has lost the most basic of all freedoms — the freedom that comes from being healthy," Kennedy said. — Aleccia reported from Temecula, Calif.

Camp Mystic girls evacuate from flood devastation
Camp Mystic girls evacuate from flood devastation

CNN

timean hour ago

  • CNN

Camp Mystic girls evacuate from flood devastation

Camp Mystic girls evacuate from flood devastation Videos shared from a Camp Mystic nurse show campers evacuating on a bus while passing devastation from the floods along the Guadalupe River in Texas. 00:49 - Source: CNN Vertical Top News 15 videos Camp Mystic girls evacuate from flood devastation Videos shared from a Camp Mystic nurse show campers evacuating on a bus while passing devastation from the floods along the Guadalupe River in Texas. 00:49 - Source: CNN City official pressed on why they didn't evacuate before flooding CNN's Pamela Brown asked Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice why evacuations weren't ordered before devastating floods hit central Texas. 01:09 - Source: CNN Volunteers comb through debris as search for missing continues CNN's Isabel Rosales is in Center Point, Texas, about 25 miles from Camp Mystic, where volunteers are bringing in heavy machinery to search for victims after deadly flooding struck the area on July 4th. 01:13 - Source: CNN Camp Mystic confirms 27 campers and counselors have died in floods Camp Mystic, an all-girls summer camp along the Guadalupe River, has confirmed that at least 27 campers and counselors died in the devastating floods that hit the Texas camp. CNN's Pamela Brown reports. 01:09 - Source: CNN Chantal triggers life-threatening flash floods More than 5 million people were under flood alerts across North Carolina and Virginia after Chantal made landfall early Sunday, damaging properties and prompting rescue efforts. 00:42 - Source: CNN Indonesia's Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki volcano erupts Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki erupted in Indonesia, sending a column of ash as high as 11 miles into the sky. 00:38 - Source: CNN Dr. Gupta discusses US measles cases surpassing 25-year-high More measles cases have been reported in the US this year than in any year since the disease was declared eliminated in 2000. CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta explains why a slight dip in vaccination rates in certain regions has led to an ongoing outbreak. 01:08 - Source: CNN How floods in Texas turned deadly CNN's Ed Lavandera reports on the ground in Texas after months-worth of torrential rain triggered deadly floods. How did the devastation unfold? 00:42 - Source: CNN Pamela Brown reports from Camp Mystic, where she went as a child CNN anchor Pamela Brown was a camper at Camp Mystic 30 years ago, so she knows firsthand that it has been 'a magical place' for generations of girls. Today, she is back there, covering the aftermath of the flood tragedy. 00:57 - Source: CNN Mangled debris shows force of Texas flash floods Barbed wire and mangled trees among the debris scattered for miles, search and rescue workers in Texas face the grueling, slow challenge of holding out hope for any survivors or remains following Friday's flash floods. CNN's Isabel Rosales is in Center Point to give a first-hand look at the challenges volunteers are facing. 00:59 - Source: CNN Group of friends search for survivors Search efforts are underway in Hunt, Texas, to find survivors outside of Camp Mystic. Brooks Holzhausen, with the volunteer group 300 Justice, spoke to CNN detailing the collaboration with state and local law enforcement to help bring missing people home. 01:05 - Source: CNN Timelapse video shows speed of floodwater rising in Texas A timelapse video captured on Friday shows how quickly floodwaters rose along the Llano River in Kingsland, Texas – a town about 95 miles northeast of Camp Mystic. The video, which was sped up, shows the water rush in and rise along the river in the span of 30 minutes. 00:31 - Source: CNN Man describes escaping Airbnb during Texas flash flooding Ricky Gonzalez and a dozen friends were staying at an Airbnb when one of them were awoken by their dog pawing at the door. When they opened the curtain, one of their vehicles was already being swept away. 01:16 - Source: CNN See flood aftermath at Camp Mystic in Texas Authorities are still racing to find victims in central Texas, including 27 people from Camp Mystic, a girls summer camp in Kerr County, where the Guadalupe River rose more than 20 feet in less than two hours during torrential rains that triggered flash flooding in parts of the state. CNN's Ed Lavandera reports. 00:57 - Source: CNN Protests continue in Israel amid ceasefire negotiations As mediators push for a ceasefire agreement in Gaza, protesters in Tel Aviv gathered in Hostages Square to demand a "complete deal" for the return of all hostages, along with a ceasefire. 00:48 - Source: CNN

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store