Mechanism: Cold exposure activates AMPK-dependent autophagy in intestinal cells, clearing uPAR+ senescent cells and boosting butyrate production, which then enhances vagal signaling to the brain. Readout: Readout: Senescent cells decrease by 30%, fecal butyrate rises by 25%, vagal firing increases by 15%, and memory improves to youthful levels.
Hypothesis
Repeated mild cold exposure drives AMPK‑dependent autophagy in intestinal epithelial cells, selectively removing uPAR+ senescent cells, rebuilding barrier function, boosting SCFA production, and enhancing vagal afferent tone, thereby reversing age‑related memory deficits.
Mechanistic Rationale
Cold stress triggers a modest rise in intracellular AMP, activating AMPK. AMPK phosphorylates ULK1, initiating autophagosome formation. In aged gut epithelium, senescent cells exhibit heightened mitochondrial ROS and reduced mitophagy, making them vulnerable to AMPK‑driven autophagic clearance. Removal of these cells reduces SASP secretion (IL‑6, IL‑1β, LPS‑inducing taxa), lowers luminal endotoxin, and permits recovery of butyrate‑producing microbes. Increased butyrate acts on colonic neuropod cells to stimulate vagal afferent firing via FFAR2, reinforcing the anti‑inflammatory cholinergic pathway that suppresses hippocampal neuroinflammation.
Novel Insight
Beyond generic hormesis, we propose that cold‑induced mitochondrial DAMPs (e.g., mtDNA) act as a “danger‑signal” that preferentially tags senescent epithelial cells for autophagic engulfment via p62‑dependent recognition, linking thermal stress directly to senolysis.
Testable Predictions
- Aged mice undergoing 4 °C water immersion (10 min, 5×/week for 4 weeks) will show a ≥30 % reduction in uPAR+ senescent cells in colonic crypts versus sham‑exposed controls.
- Fecal butyrate concentrations will rise ≥25 % and plasma LPS will fall ≥20 % in cold‑treated mice.
- Vagal afferent firing rates recorded from the cervical vagus will increase by ~15 % and hippocampal IL‑1β mRNA will decrease by ~30 %.
- Spatial memory performance in the Morris water maze will improve to youthful levels (escape latency <20 s).
- Pharmacological inhibition of AMPK (Compound C) or genetic autophagy blockade (Atg5‑KO intestinal epithelium) will abolish the senescent‑cell clearance, SCFA rise, vagal activation, and cognitive rescue.
Experimental Design
- Subjects: 20‑month‑old C57BL/6 mice, n=10 per group.
- Groups: (1) Cold exposure, (2) Sham (room‑temp water), (3) Cold + AMPK inhibitor, (4) Cold + intestinal‑specific Atg5 KO.
- Procedures: Weekly cold exposures, fecal SCFA quantification via GC‑MS, plasma LPS via LAL assay, colonic immunohistochemistry for uPAR and p62, ex‑vivo vagal electrophysiology, behavioral testing pre‑ and post‑intervention.
- Analysis: Two‑way ANOVA with post‑hoc Tukey; significance set at p<0.05.
Potential Confounds & Controls
- Stress from handling mitigated by acclimatization and habituation to water.
- Ensure core temperature does not drop below 32 °C to avoid hypothermia‑induced artifacts.
- Include pair‑fed controls to rule out caloric intake differences.
- Verify that autophagy markers (LC3‑II/I, p62) increase specifically in epithelial fractions, not immune cells.
If predictions hold, this would establish a clear, mechanistic link between a peripheral hormetic stimulus (cold) and central cognitive outcomes via targeted gut senolysis, offering a translatable, non‑pharmacological strategy for age‑related cognitive decline.
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