Literature DB >> 17116316

The genetics and epigenetics of altered proliferative homeostasis in ageing and cancer.

George M Martin1.   

Abstract

Ageing mammals are subject to an amazing array of aberrations in proliferative homeostasis. These are of two basic types: the post-maturational failure to adequately replace effete somatic cells (atrophies) and excessive proliferations of somatic cells (hyperplasias). To a surprising degree, these occur side by side within the same tissues and are features of numerous mammalian geriatric disorders. Atrophy is the likely usual initial event, the proliferative response perhaps developing as a secondary, compensatory, initially adaptive reaction. We have little understanding of why this putative compensatory reaction so often fails to be appropriately regulated in ageing mammals, leading to such pathologies as chronic inflammation, fibrosis, metaplasia and neoplasia. Advances in formal genetic analysis, mutagenesis, stem cell biology and epigenetics are likely to provide major new understanding. Stochastic epigenetic shifts in gene expression are of growing interest, particularly in explaining intra-specific variations on rates and patterns of ageing. Nature may well have evolved such random fluctuations in gene expression as a type of group-selectionist adaptive strategy to cope with diverse stochastic environmental challenges. Alternatively, such background "noise" in transcription and translation may simply reflect a type of informational entropy.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17116316      PMCID: PMC1868440          DOI: 10.1016/j.mad.2006.11.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mech Ageing Dev        ISSN: 0047-6374            Impact factor:   5.432


  32 in total

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Authors:  J Wanagat; Z Cao; P Pathare; J M Aiken
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Review 7.  Ageing and cancer: the telomere and telomerase connection.

Authors:  J W Shay; W E Wright
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9.  Intestinal stem cells protect their genome by selective segregation of template DNA strands.

Authors:  Christopher S Potten; Gary Owen; Dawn Booth
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10.  Mitochondrial DNA mutations in human colonic crypt stem cells.

Authors:  Robert W Taylor; Martin J Barron; Gillian M Borthwick; Amy Gospel; Patrick F Chinnery; David C Samuels; Geoffrey A Taylor; Stefan M Plusa; Stephanie J Needham; Laura C Greaves; Thomas B L Kirkwood; Douglass M Turnbull
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  5 in total

Review 1.  Stochastic modulations of the pace and patterns of ageing: impacts on quasi-stochastic distributions of multiple geriatric pathologies.

Authors:  George M Martin
Journal:  Mech Ageing Dev       Date:  2011-09-22       Impact factor: 5.432

Review 2.  A LINE-1 component to human aging: do LINE elements exact a longevity cost for evolutionary advantage?

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Journal:  Mech Ageing Dev       Date:  2010-03-25       Impact factor: 5.432

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Authors:  Vanja Pekovic; Christopher J Hutchison
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Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2009-03-14       Impact factor: 5.742

5.  What determines the switch between atrophic and neovascular forms of age related macular degeneration? - the role of BMP4 induced senescence.

Authors:  Danhong Zhu; Xuemei Deng; Jing Xu; David R Hinton
Journal:  Aging (Albany NY)       Date:  2009-08-12       Impact factor: 5.682

  5 in total

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