TY - JOUR
T1 - Atlas of human cerebellar aging
T2 - nonlinear molecular trajectories reveal multidimensional mechanisms underlying cognitive and motor function regulation
AU - Ma, Xiuling
AU - Zhao, Likun
AU - Pan, Hongxin
AU - Feng, Zhongwen
AU - Lin, Jianlin
AU - Ji, Junjun
AU - Li, Junrong
AU - Liu, Xiaoxia
AU - Wang, Jinfeng
AU - Tang, Xijun
AU - Li, Kefeng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2026. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Gerontological Society of America. All rights reserved.
PY - 2026/4/1
Y1 - 2026/4/1
N2 - The cerebellum, traditionally recognized for motor coordination, may also contribute to cognitive and emotional regulation, as recent evidence indicates. However, the molecular and structural changes in the human cerebellum during healthy aging remain poorly understood. This study systematically investigated the molecular trajectories and structural alterations in the human cerebellum across the adult lifespan (20-80 years) by integrating cerebella transcriptomic data from 456 non-disease brains and MRI structural neuroimaging data from 264 disease-free subjects. Fuzzy clustering analyses uncovered nonlinear expression trajectories involving synaptic plasticity, metabolic regulation, and protein homeostasis, highlighting multiple critical biological turning points across different age periods. Differential gene expression analyses identified early downregulation of immediate early genes (eg, FOS, NPAS4, EGR1-3) and sustained activation of stress-response pathways changes that precede observable functional decline. Moreover, we identified an integrated “synaptic plasticity-stress homeostasis” module, where immediate early genes and heat shock proteins exhibit coordinated regulation whose efficiency progressively declines with age. MRI analyses showed a pronounced acceleration of cerebellar gray matter (GM) loss after age 70, with multiple subregions affected, highlighting the nonlinear trajectory of cerebellar structural aging. In combination with the transcriptomic findings, these results indicate that cerebellar aging comprises complex, stage-dependent molecular alterations accompanied by GM reductions in later decades. This collective evidence advances our understanding of cerebellar aging biology and highlights the synaptic-stress module as a promising molecular axis that may inform future strategies to support cerebellar function in older adults.
AB - The cerebellum, traditionally recognized for motor coordination, may also contribute to cognitive and emotional regulation, as recent evidence indicates. However, the molecular and structural changes in the human cerebellum during healthy aging remain poorly understood. This study systematically investigated the molecular trajectories and structural alterations in the human cerebellum across the adult lifespan (20-80 years) by integrating cerebella transcriptomic data from 456 non-disease brains and MRI structural neuroimaging data from 264 disease-free subjects. Fuzzy clustering analyses uncovered nonlinear expression trajectories involving synaptic plasticity, metabolic regulation, and protein homeostasis, highlighting multiple critical biological turning points across different age periods. Differential gene expression analyses identified early downregulation of immediate early genes (eg, FOS, NPAS4, EGR1-3) and sustained activation of stress-response pathways changes that precede observable functional decline. Moreover, we identified an integrated “synaptic plasticity-stress homeostasis” module, where immediate early genes and heat shock proteins exhibit coordinated regulation whose efficiency progressively declines with age. MRI analyses showed a pronounced acceleration of cerebellar gray matter (GM) loss after age 70, with multiple subregions affected, highlighting the nonlinear trajectory of cerebellar structural aging. In combination with the transcriptomic findings, these results indicate that cerebellar aging comprises complex, stage-dependent molecular alterations accompanied by GM reductions in later decades. This collective evidence advances our understanding of cerebellar aging biology and highlights the synaptic-stress module as a promising molecular axis that may inform future strategies to support cerebellar function in older adults.
KW - Cerebellum
KW - Cognitive decline
KW - Motor function
KW - Nonlinear aging
KW - Synaptic plasticity-stress homeostasis network
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105033130049
U2 - 10.1093/gerona/glag022
DO - 10.1093/gerona/glag022
M3 - Article
C2 - 41644416
AN - SCOPUS:105033130049
SN - 1079-5006
VL - 81
JO - Journals of Gerontology - Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences
JF - Journals of Gerontology - Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences
IS - 4
M1 - glag022
ER -