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Health

The secret signals our organs send to repair tissues and slow ageing

Your organs are constantly talking to each other in ways we’re only beginning to understand. Tapping into these communication networks is opening up radical new ways to boost health

By Claire Ainsworth

2 February 2026

Âé¶¹´«Ã½. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Davide Bonazzi

At first glance, itÌýmight not seem like people have much in common with deer. But a strange discovery aboutÌýhowÌýtheir antlers regenerateÌýis lifting the lidÌýonÌýthe unseen ways that our bodies work, too. ÌýÌýÌý

Biologist , who has long studied deer in north-east China, noticed something odd that happened when the animals regrew their antlers each year. This regrowth coincided with healthier-looking animals that showed much faster healing of their wounds and less scarring, leading him to suspect that the regenerating antlers somehowÌýpromotedÌýregeneration in the wider body. Ìý ÌýÌý

Li’s hunch was confirmed last year when he and his colleagues at Changchun Sci-Tech University in Jilin, China, found that the growing antlers release messages that tell other parts of the body to shift into regenerative wound-healing mode – evidence of a hitherto-hidden communication network that connects distant organs. ÌýÌý

This findingÌýdoesn’tÌýapply only to deer. In recent years, researchers have discovered a web of chatter among the human body’s organs and tissues, even those we once thought were dull and inert. We now know that yourÌýfatÌýand brainÌýtissueÌýconverseÌýto influence the speed at which youÌýage,Ìýyour skeleton sends information packets to the pancreas to control metabolism, and much more.

By tapping into these communication networks, we may be able to develop radical new ways to boost our health and slow ageing – and some clinical trials of this approach are already under way. Ìý Ìý

Crosstalk between organs

These ongoing findings are emerging from the new field of inter-organ communication, which is building on the old physiological idea that organs function together as a greater whole.

We have long known that information is transmitted around the body via nerve networks and hormones, but what is extraordinary about these latest discoveries is the growing diversity of ways in which organs and tissues “talk†to each other to coordinate their action. Indeed, inter-organ communication is now seen asÌýcritical machinery for controlling metabolism,ÌýageingÌýand overall health.Ìý

Older women competing in a race.

The ageing process is orchestrated via “conversations” between different organs and tissues

Chris Howes/Wild Places Photography/Alamy

“I think we’ll suddenly see that organs are communicating in ways we didn’t know about,” saysÌý at the Crick Institute in London. “And then if we find that, then we can see what goes wrong in disease.” Ìý

The first clues that there might be more to some organs and tissues than first supposed arose in the mid-1990s, when researchers discovered that fat, or adipose tissue, makes a hormone called leptin, which helps control appetite and the body’s energy balance. This transformed our perception of fat: once seen as passive storage tissue, it is now thought of as a dynamic, vital organ.ÌýÌýÌý

Since then, it has emerged that pretty much every organ or tissue is chipping in. One of the biggest surprises is bone, long thought of as a lifeless mechanical scaffold. In fact, we now know that bone functions as a sophisticated “endocrine†organ, that influences metabolism, and . It even reaches the brain, where it , improves spatial memory and enhances cognition. Boosting falling levels of osteocalcin may one day offer a way of .

Osteoporosis isn’t the only condition that could benefit from intervening in inter-organ signalling: ageing itself could be a target

The skeletonÌýhas its fingers inÌýso manyÌýpiesÌýbecause the energetic cost of running it is exorbitant.ÌýTo repair tiny fractures caused by mechanical stress, bone is constantly being broken down by cells called osteoclasts, and in turn constantly rebuilt by cells known as osteoblasts.Ìý“Bone health has to be connected to energy metabolism in a way that bone can grow, but not at the expense of the other organs andÌýfunction,†saysÌý at Columbia University in New York. This is why it has such a powerful influence on so many other organs and tissues. And, importantly, other organs talk back.Ìý

One such organ is fat, which talks to bone via leptin. Back in 2002, that fat sends signals to the brain, which responds in part by increasing nerve activity in the sympathetic nervous system, whose tendrils reach many organs, including bone. There, its nerve endings send signals to osteoblasts,Ìýreducing bone building and increasing bone destruction.ÌýThis means that leptin signals from fat are a major regulator of bone mass.ÌýÌýÌý

Skeleton in the Museum for Natural History Berlin.

Our skeleton isn’t just a mechanical scaffold, but a dynamic organ that orchestrates many processes in the body

Michael Heise/Unsplash

Osteoporosis treatment

AÌýstudy from 2018Ìýshowed that these signals can be known as beta-blockers, which inhibit stress hormones like adrenaline released by the sympathetic nervous system. So these drugs might be a cost-effective way of preventing bone loss in women after menopause and in older people more generally. Two .ÌýÌý

OsteoporosisÌýisn’tÌýthe only condition that couldÌýbenefitÌýfromÌýinterveningÌýin inter-organÌýsignalling: ageing itself could be a target. This springs from theÌý that a small region of the brain known as the hypothalamus appears to integrate conversations from multiple organs, and so acts as a high-order controller of ageing and, in turn, longevity. Ìý

at Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, whose team was one of the two that made the discovery, thinks of this orchestration as an entire interconnected system that maintains a stable function, or “robustness”. When this robustness falters, it results in ageing and physiological decline. “We need to integrate all the different pieces from all the different layers, like a molecular layer, cellular layer, tissue, organ layer, to understand the whole system,” he says.Ìý

Longevity controller

Imai and his colleagues have put many of these pieces together. For example, in 2024, they showed that a Ìýof neurons in the hypothalamus of mice talks to adipose tissue through the sympathetic nervous system, triggering the release of an enzyme essential for producing NAD+, a molecule that is vital to cellular metabolism and associated with longevity. When the researchers stimulated these neurons in old mice, the mice lived longer than control mice that didn’t receive this stimulation. Ìý

“This is the first demonstration in mammals that manipulation of specific neurons really delays ageing and extends lifespan,” says Imai. Moreover, the 2024 study concluded thatÌý“these findings clearly demonstrate the importance of the inter-tissue communication… in mammalian aging and longevity controlâ€. Ìý

Other organs, including skeletal muscle and the small intestine, also converse with the hypothalamus. For instance, in unpublished work, Imai and his colleagues have identified the hormone used by skeletal muscle to communicate with this brain region. Ìý

Each of these communication pathways operates independently but synergistically to maintain the overall system’s robustness, says Imai, which we can tap into in turn. So, rather than someone taking supplements to boost NAD+ in the hope of slowing down the ageing process – a strategy whose efficacy is still being investigated in humans – Imai proposed a last year, which he terms “inter-organ communication management”. This would involve interventions to strengthen each of these brain-organ conversations simultaneously “as an anti-ageing preventative measureâ€, he says. “We are working to translate this idea to humans.â€Ìý

The body’s diverse languages

To do this, we need to fully understand all the different communication systems that organs use to send messages around the body. We now know that organs use a bewildering smorgasbord of languages to communicate, not just the well-known routes of hormones and nerve action. These include metabolites, small molecules carrying information about energy status and cellular health, and new signaling molecules, such as those produced when skeletal muscles contract that act on many other tissues, including the brain and liver.

New types of these messengers are constantly being uncovered, thanks to advances in analytical technologies. For instance, in January, researchers showed how a type of body fat called via a protein it produces called QSOX1, which helps control the stiffness of blood vessels. And a study from November last year found that cancer cells manipulate inter-organ signaling — in this case, via nerves — to .Ìý

But one of the most exciting discoveries in the field of inter-organ communication is the way that many of these factors are shunted around the body in mysterious bubble-like blobs known as extracellularÌývesiclesÌý(EVs), which our cells constantly shed. When they were first spotted inÌýcells inÌýtheÌý1980s, researchers assumed the cells were just spitting out junk. But we now know there is a whole constellation of EVs of varying sizes, carrying a range of cargoes, from large vesicles bearing mitochondria (the energy engines of the cell) to smaller ones known as exosomes that carry tiny fragments of RNAÌýcalled microRNAs, which can influence gene activity in recipient cells.ÌýÌý

A bubble-like blob called an extracellular vesicle.

Bubble-like blobs called extracelllular vesicles are a key way for organs to send messages around the body

Shutterstock/Juan Gaertner

Here, too, new varieties of EVs are continually being unearthed, such as the discovery last year of particularly massive ones dubbedÌý“â€, which function as mobile communication centres. At the opposite end of the spectrum are the tiny ÌýandÌý, both discovered in 2021, which aren’t encased in membrane. Plus, there are oncosomes, produced by cancer cells. All are emerging as important players in health and disease.

In a 2022 study, for instance,Ìý at Harvard Medical School and his colleagues showed that heart cells and a type of cell from connective tissue called a fibroblast communicate via EVs to . But EVs can cause problems,Ìýtoo. In 2023, Das and his team showed that EVs produced by the heart can make their way to the kidneys andÌýÌý– damage that could potentially be prevented by therapeutic intervention.Ìý

Obesity, too,ÌýÌýon the body via EVs.ÌýTheseÌýcanÌý, crossing the blood-brain barrier to talk to immune cells in the brain called microglia, which are involved in brain inflammation.Ìý“We’re looking at the whole connection between obesity and dementia,” says Das.ÌýFat also talks to the liver via EVs, which areÌýemergingÌýasÌýan important factorÌýin a form ofÌýÌýcaused by metabolic dysfunction. And fat-derived EVs also seem to play a role in theÌý.Ìý

Recent studies also show thatÌýÌýsuch as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s, transporting microRNAs and pathological proteins from the brain to peripheral organs. This helps explain the progression of these conditions beyond the nervous system.ÌýÌý

The ageing process

We are even finding that these once-mysterious blobs play a pivotal role in ageing. A key factor in ageing is the accumulation of  senescent, or “â€, cells, which promote inflammation and damage in tissue, leading to age-related decline. Senescent cells release EVs that, like sparks from a wildfire, , even in distant organs. Senescent cells in the lungs of people with chronic lung disease emit EVs that trigger senescence in , for example. This probably contributes to what is known as the “multimorbidity of the elderlyâ€, the fact that older people usually have several chronic conditions, such as heart disease combined with muscle wasting and kidney disease.  Ìý

Still, there is a long way to go before we fully understand the variety of EVs within the body and their precise roles. But this work underlines the idea that no organ is an island. “You really cannot think of [diseases of these organs] as siloed,” says Das. For example, the leading type of heart failure was long believed to concern the heart only. “But the more you look at it, it’s a systemic disease,” says Das. “It has obesity, it has liver dysfunction, it has kidney dysfunction, it even has dementia.” This may explain why GLP-1 drugs, although originally designed to aid weight loss and treat diabetes, are now being used toÌý.ÌýÌýÌý

This all raises the question of why our organs need to speak so many different languages. One possibility is that the location of the conversation matters. “Maybe there’s a spatial logic to this communication, and then for that reason it matters what organ is next to what organ,” says Miguel-Aliaga. In 2024, she and her team found that, in fruit flies, by secreting specific substances, and that changing their geometry can make them function differently.

“We really don’t understand this spatial specificity very well. But I think it’s going to be important because I think it’ll add a layer of information in between the organ and organism level that we still don’t know about,” says Miguel-Aliaga. “Potentially, it’s a language in itself.â€

One reason why this kind of communication system might be useful is that it offers yet more versatility in targeting particular messages to specific “audiences” of tissues and organs. Some signals, such as conventional hormones, are broadcast body-wide like a national radio show. Others could be locally confined, with organs whispering to each other like next-door neighbours over a garden fence.

While we don’t yet know for sure why so many languages are needed, their existence highlights the complexity of coordinating a collection of organs in space and time into a whole organism. And it suggests that, while we thought we already knew everything about what our organs do, they are each likely to have a range of extra functions that we haven’t yet discovered.

Restoring good communication – local, organ-wide and body-wide – could also help us understand more about regeneration and perhaps how to make humans better at it. Experiments linking the blood systems of both young and old mice have revealed the presence of signals that can rejuvenate some tissues and extend lifespan. And studies of animals that excel at regeneration are starting to show that, in many cases, it is a process involving coordinated responses from different tissues and organs, even those remote from the injury.Ìý

A red deer.

Antler regrowth in deer seems to trigger a wider regeneration, including better wound healing

Danny Green/2020VISION/Nature Picture Library/Alamy

Amputating an axolotl’s leg, for instance, triggers a body-wide reaction. The cells at the injury site revert to a more embryonic-like state, called a blastema, which gives them the flexibility to regenerate the limb – something mammals can’t do. At the same time, cells in the opposite limb and in organs such as the liver, heart and spinal cord also start dividing. Intriguingly, although mice don’t have the same reaction, if you damage a muscle in one limb, stem cells in the opposite limb enter an “alert” state that means they can respond to injury faster. This is triggered by a Ìý

Li’s work on deer antlers reveals similar principles, showing thatÌý between neighbouring tissues and body-wide communication are involved in this spectacular act of regeneration. Applying extracts of blood from deer that are regenerating their antlers to wounded ratsÌýmakes the rats’ wounds that repairs them almost scar-free. Li and his team are now working on a formula to test this in humans.ÌýÌý

New therapies from inter-organ communication

Indeed, the challenge ahead for this field is to translate discoveries into new therapies, but this is beginning to happen. For instance, an ambitious project across five researchÌýcentresÌýin Germany was kick-started last year to investigate theÌýrole of faulty inter-organ communication in the muscle loss linked to conditions such as cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Certain metabolites associated with these conditions can reprogram immune cells, which then promote muscle wastage. The project aims to identify these metabolites, with the ultimate goal of developing therapies that target them. And in the US, the Ìýinter-organ communication as a research priority.Ìý

It took four decades of patient observation for Li to discover the secret of the deer’s mysterious annual rejuvenation. It turns out our own bodies have been just as cryptic, with our organs talking between themselves without us noticing. Now that we are learning to listen, we can find ways to turn their conversation to our advantage.Ìý

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