Age-Related Stem Cell Exhaustion Is Primarily a Niche Problem, Not a Cell-Intrinsic Problem
The dogma: stem cells wear out with age. The revision: stem cells are still there, but their niche has gone to hell. Aged muscle satellite cells transplanted into a young niche function like young cells (Conboy et al., 2005, Nature). Young hematopoietic stem cells placed in an aged bone marrow niche behave old (Ergen et al., 2012, Blood).
The niche controls stem cell behavior through Wnt, Notch, and BMP signaling, extracellular matrix composition, and local oxygen tension. All of these deteriorate with age — driven by senescent niche cells, fibrosis, and vascular decline.
Hypothesis: Rejuvenating the stem cell niche (clearing senescent niche cells, restoring ECM composition, and normalizing local vasculature) will be sufficient to restore stem cell function to youthful levels in >80% of aged tissues, without any direct stem cell intervention.
Prediction: Senolytic clearance of senescent cells from the muscle stem cell niche of 24-month-old mice, combined with local delivery of young ECM components, will restore satellite cell activation rates to 6-month-old levels within 4 weeks.
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