| Literature DB >> 25702865 |
Ellen K Quarles1, Dao-Fu Dai2, Autumn Tocchi3, Nathan Basisty4, Lemuel Gitari5, Peter S Rabinovitch6.
Abstract
Cardiac aging is an intrinsic process that results in impaired cardiac function, along with cellular and molecular changes. These degenerative changes are intimately associated with quality control mechanisms. This review provides a general overview of the clinical and cellular changes which manifest in cardiac aging, and the quality control mechanisms involved in maintaining homeostasis and retarding aging. These mechanisms include autophagy, ubiquitin-mediated turnover, apoptosis, mitochondrial quality control and cardiac matrix homeostasis. Finally, we discuss aging interventions that have been observed to impact cardiac health outcomes. These include caloric restriction, rapamycin, resveratrol, GDF11, mitochondrial antioxidants and cardiolipin-targeted therapeutics. A greater understanding of the quality control mechanisms that promote cardiac homeostasis will help to understand the benefits of these interventions, and hopefully lead to further improved therapeutic modalities.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Cardiac function; Heart; Proteostasis; Quality control
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25702865 PMCID: PMC4686341 DOI: 10.1016/j.arr.2015.02.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ageing Res Rev ISSN: 1568-1637 Impact factor: 10.895