Literature DB >> 26608516

An epigenetic clock controls aging.

Josh Mitteldorf1.   

Abstract

We are accustomed to treating aging as a set of things that go wrong with the body. But for more than twenty years, there has been accumulating evidence that much of the process takes place under genetic control. We have seen that signaling chemistry can make dramatic differences in life span, and that single molecules can significantly affect longevity. We are frequently confronted with puzzling choices the body makes which benefit neither present health nor fertility nor long-term survival. If we permit ourselves a shift of reference frame and regard aging as a programmed biological function like growth and development, then these observations fall into place and make sense. This perspective suggests that aging proceeds under control of a master clock, or several redundant clocks. If this is so, we may learn to reset the clocks with biochemical interventions and make an old body behave like a young body, including repair of many of the modes of damage that we are accustomed to regard as independent symptoms of the senescent phenotype, and for which we have assumed that the body has no remedy.

Keywords:  Epigenetic; Evolution; Gene expression; Life history; Programmed aging; Senescence

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26608516     DOI: 10.1007/s10522-015-9617-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biogerontology        ISSN: 1389-5729            Impact factor:   4.277


  4 in total

1.  THE (A)SYMMETRY OF THE MALE GRAYING BEARD HAIRS AS AN INDICATION OF THE PROGRAMMED AGING PROCESS.

Authors:  Borut Poljsak; Raja Dahmane; Metka Adamič; Robert Sotler; Tina Levec; Doroteja Pavan Jukić; Cecilija Rotim; Tomislav Jukić; Andrej Starc
Journal:  Acta Clin Croat       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 0.932

2.  Dispersal capacity explains the evolution of lifespan variability.

Authors:  Ismael Galván; Anders P Møller
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-04-19       Impact factor: 2.912

3.  Human ageing as a dynamic, emergent and malleable process: from disease-oriented to health-oriented approaches.

Authors:  Piotr Paweł Chmielewski
Journal:  Biogerontology       Date:  2019-10-08       Impact factor: 4.277

4.  Aging and rejuvenation - a modular epigenome model.

Authors:  Priscila Chiavellini; Martina Canatelli-Mallat; Marianne Lehmann; Maria D Gallardo; Claudia B Herenu; Jose L Cordeiro; James Clement; Rodolfo G Goya
Journal:  Aging (Albany NY)       Date:  2021-02-24       Impact factor: 5.682

  4 in total

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