This piece of the puzzle, and its finding, if confirmed, is very neat. But I think we are barking at the wrong tree, because senescence is inherently chaotic. Sometimes we identify a disease with a set of common symptoms because there are many alternative causes that lead to those very symptoms. It's like "convergent symptoms", so to speak.
If I had any funding to work freely in these subjects, I would instead focus on the more fundamental questions of computationally mapping and reversing cellular senescence, starting with something tiny and trivial (but perhaps not tiny nor trivial enough) like a rotifer. My focus wouldn't be the biologists' "we want to understand this rotifer", "or we want to understand senescence", but more "can we create an exact computational framework to map senescence, a framework which can be extended and applied to other organisms"?
Sadly, funding for science is a lost cause, because even where/when it is available, it comes with all sort of political and ideological chains.
There's a lot of interesting research going on in cellular reprogramming to make cells seem younger. See for example https://www.washingtonpost.com/wellness/2025/03/06/cellular-...
Have you ever lived with or helped a person with AD? It's not cellular senescence. What you're talking about is fine and well, but AD is a devastating disease that has very particular symptoms. We may not know all of the causes, but reversing cellular senescence isn't going to solve this.
Researching and curing AD is not barking up the wrong tree. There is a horrible deadly monster in that tree that needs defeating. I hope people also get scientific funding for other age-related issues.