- Castner, Stacy;
- Gupta, Shweta;
- Wang, Dan;
- Moreno, Arturo;
- Chen, Chen;
- Poon, Yan;
- Groen, Aaron;
- Greenberg, Kenneth;
- David, Nathaniel;
- Boone, Tom;
- Baxter, Mark;
- Williams, Graham;
- Dubal, Dena;
- Park, Cana
Cognitive dysfunction in aging is a major biomedical challenge. Whether treatment with klotho, a longevity factor, could enhance cognition in human-relevant models such as in nonhuman primates is unknown and represents a major knowledge gap in the path to therapeutics. We validated the rhesus form of the klotho protein in mice showing it increased synaptic plasticity and cognition. We then found that a single administration of low-dose, but not high-dose, klotho enhanced memory in aged nonhuman primates. Systemic low-dose klotho treatment may prove therapeutic in aging humans.