Keywords are indicative only and meant to help authors identify the most appropriate track for abstract submission.
Track 1 — Mitochondria and Aging Trajectories
• Mitochondrial dynamics
• Bioenergetics
• Mitophagy
• Mitochondrial signaling
• Mitochondrial plasticity
• Stress adaptation
• Mitochondrial dysfunction
• Aging trajectories
• Cellular resilience
• Energy metabolism
Track 2 — Microbiota–Host Systems in Longevity
• Gut microbiota
• Host–microbe interactions
• Microbiota-derived metabolites
• Short-chain fatty acids
• Immune modulation
• Metabolic regulation
• Dysbiosis and aging
• Microbiota–mitochondria crosstalk
• Personalized aging trajectories
Track 3 — Redox and Inflammation as Adaptive Signals
• Redox signaling
• Oxidative stress
• Redox homeostasis
• Inflammaging
• Immune regulation
• Adaptive stress responses
• Hormesis
• Antioxidant strategies
• Chronic inflammation
• Signal regulation vs damage
Track 4 — Integrative and Comparative Models of Aging
• Animal models of aging
• Comparative biology
• Cross-species longevity
• Translational aging research
• Systems biology models
• Model limitations
• Evolutionary aging
• Experimental aging paradigms
Track 5 — Longevity Medicine in Companion Animals
• Veterinary longevity
• Aging in dogs, cats, horses
• Animal healthspan
• Companion animal aging
• Clinical aging markers
• Mitochondria in animals
• Microbiota in veterinary medicine
• Translational veterinary models
Track 6 — From Systems Biology to Longevity Strategies
• Systems medicine
• Longevity interventions
• Extracellular vesicles / exosomes
• Metabolites and signaling
• Stem cells and regeneration
• Biosensors
• Dynamic biomarkers
• Personalized longevity strategies
• Monitoring aging trajectories
Track 7 — Ethics, Responsibility, and Governance in Longevity Medicine
• Ethics of longevity
• Preventive medicine ethics
• Aging intervention timing
• Risk–benefit assessment
• Equity and access
• Data governance
• Responsible innovation
• Human and animal ethics
• Societal impact of longevity medicine
Abstracts addressing interdisciplinary or cross-cutting topics may be submitted to the track that best reflects the primary scientific question.