Your blood might be doing more for your skin and your cells than anyone realized. Two studies released within months of each other suggest the bloodstream isn’t just a transport system. It might be one of the body’s most active tools for fighting the effects of aging.

A bacterium that lives in your blood produces three compounds that protected skin cells in lab tests, and separately, scientists found a way to reverse aging in blood stem cells in mice. Neither discovery is available as a treatment yet, but together they’re changing how researchers think about where anti-aging science should be looking next.

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What Is Anti-Aging the Bacteria Found in Human Blood?

The bacterium is called Paracoccus sanguinis, and it’s been living in human blood since before anyone knew it was there. Scientists only identified it in 2015. In a study published in the Journal of Natural Products in May 2025, researchers found the bacterium produces three compounds that had protective effects on human skin cells in lab tests. Two of the three compounds had never been seen before.

When applied to skin cells under stress, the compounds reduced reactive oxygen species (which are linked to inflammation), cut levels of two inflammatory proteins and blocked an enzyme called MMP-1 that breaks down collagen.

One compound, called metabolite 11, stood out as the most effective, and researchers say it’s the strongest candidate for future anti-aging applications. The research was funded by the National Research Foundation of Korea, the BK21 FOUR Project and the National Supercomputing Center.

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Can I Use This Bacteria for My Skin Right Now?

Not yet. These are lab results from cells in a dish, not from real skin on a real person. The compounds have never been tested in humans, and nothing on the market today contains them, despite what some marketing might suggest. If metabolite 11 eventually gets developed into something usable, that process would likely take years.

What Did the Mount Sinai Stem Cell Aging Study Find?

The second study comes from Mount Sinai and tackles a different part of the aging puzzle entirely: blood stem cells. Dr. Saghi Ghaffari and his team at the Icahn School of Medicine found that stem cells, which produce all of your blood cells, age in part because of a problem inside a structure called the lysosome, which acts like a recycling center for the cell.

In aged mice, the lysosomes inside these stem cells became overly acidic, damaged and started working abnormally. When researchers fixed that problem, the old stem cells started acting young again. They regained their ability to regenerate, and inflammation linked to aging dropped too. Ghaffari described the findings simply: “Our findings reveal that aging in blood stem cells is not an irreversible fate.

Old blood stem cells have the capacity to revert to a youthful state; they can bounce back.” The study appeared in Cell Stem Cell in November 2025 and was funded by the National Institutes of Health, New York State Stem Cell Science, INSERM and the Agence Nationale de la Recherche.

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What Could This Mean for the Future of Anti-Aging Treatments?

If the science holds up, the implications go beyond cosmetics. Researchers say the stem cell findings could eventually help prevent age-related blood disorders, improve how well stem cell transplants work and make gene therapy safer for older patients.

Ghaffari’s team is also looking into whether the same lysosome problem plays a role in leukemia, which becomes more common with age. On the skin side, if metabolite 11 can be isolated and stabilized, it could become an ingredient in future skincare or supplements, though that’s still a big if.

What Should I Actually Do for My Skin and Aging Right Now?

For now, both findings live firmly in the research stage. Nothing here changes what works for your skin or your health today. Sleep, nutrition, sun protection and managing inflammation remain your best tools. But the direction is notable. Scientists used to think of blood mostly as plumbing. Now they’re starting to ask what your skin longevity routine should actually include while science figures out what else your blood might be quietly doing for you.

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