The Body's Hidden Architecture: Why the Space Between Your Cells May Hold the Secret to How You Age
We have long understood aging through the lens of individual organs — the failing heart, the stiffening artery, the declining kidney. Modern medicine has grown extraordinarily sophisticated at intervening in each of these systems in isolation. And yet, for all that sophistication, the fundamental question of why the body ages as a coordinated whole, rather than as a collection of independent failures, has remained stubbornly unanswered. The answer, emerging from the frontier of experimental gerontology, may lie not inside our cells or organs at all, but in the connective tissue that links them — the vast, largely invisible medium through which every physiological process in the body ultimately unfolds. Connective tissue is easy to underestimate. We tend to think of it as structural filler — the scaffolding that holds everything else in place. But this picture misses something profound. Connective tissue is not passive architecture. It is an active regulatory environment: a living matri...