2022

Hevolution/AFAR New Investigator Awards in Aging Biology and Geroscience Research


Wu Headshot

Lindsay Wu, PhD

Senior Research Fellow, University of New South Wales

Overcoming ovarian failure to extend women's health and lifespan

Why do women live longer than men? This trend doesn't just hold true across human societies, but it extends across the entire evolutionary tree of life, even in species that do not use the same chromosome system as mammals. In many respects, the fundamental biology of aging differs between males and females, meaning that interventions to improve late-life health will most likely be tailored according to sex. In humans, ovarian decline results in menopause and a host of age-related disease including osteoporosis, heart disease and changes in metabolism - in addition to the onset of female infertility, which is a pressing issue for society. Dr. Wu's group previously discovered that increasing levels of a vitamin co-factor called NAD+ could restore female fertility in mice which were older than the normal age of reproduction. Aside from addressing infertility, improving ovarian function could be important to improving the health of older women, lowering their risk of osteoporosis and other diseases. In this project, Dr. Wu will explore new strategies for altering cell metabolism in the ovary to improve women's health in their older years, with an additional focus on improving the health of female cancer survivors, who are at risk of accelerated age-related disease due to chemotherapy treatment.

More 2022 Recipients of this Grant

Samuel Beck, PhD

Big data-guided anti-aging drug discovery and its validation

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Charlotte Cecil, PhD

What makes clocks tick? Mapping determinants of epigenetic age acceleration in early life

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Marco Demaria, PhD

Targeting altered Ca2+ signaling in cellular senescence to extend healthy longevity

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Peter Douglas, PhD

Intracellular lipid surveillance and nuclear hormone receptor dynamics in age determination

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Nir Eynon, PhD

Uncovering sex-specific epigenetic ageing molecules in response to exercise

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Aditi Gurkar, PhD

A Nanoscale Detection Tool for Senescence

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Diana Jurk, PhD

Investigating liver-to-brain transmission of cellular senescence during aging

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Adam Konopka, PhD

Interaction of Rapamycin and Exercise on Healthspan

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Sailendra Nichenametla, PhD

Investigating the role of serinogenesis in regulating lipid metabolism

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Miranda Orr, PhD

Spatial proteogenomic profiling to determine the impact of senescent neurons on the aging brain

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Daniel Roh, PhD

Targeting Wound Senescence to Improve Wound Healing in Aging

Daniel Roh
Markus Schosserer, PhD

Targeting the epitranscriptome to promote healthy lifespan

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Kosaku Shinoda, PhD

Proper Control of Inflammatory Cell Death during Aging of Brown Adipose Tissue (BAT)

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Marlene Starr, PhD

The Role of Adipose Tissue-Resident γδ T Cells in Age-Associated Inflammation and Metabolic Dysfunction

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Stefano Tarantini, PhD

Intravital characterization of mitochondrial dysfunction in the aged brain endothelium

Stefano Tarantini
Ming Xu, PhD

The synergistic benefits of metformin and senolytics on lifespan and healthspan

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Zhixun Dou, PhD

Loss of nuclear proteostasis in senescence and aging

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