| Literature DB >> 32229707 |
Vladimir P Skulachev1, Gregory A Shilovsky1,2,3, Tatyana S Putyatina3, Nikita A Popov4, Alexander V Markov3,5, Maxim V Skulachev1, Victor A Sadovnichii6.
Abstract
Homo sapiens and naked mole rats (Heterocephalus glaber) are vivid examples of social mammals that differ from their relatives in particular by an increased lifespan and a large number of neotenic features. An important fact for biogerontology is that the mortality rate of H. glaber (a maximal lifespan of more than 32 years, which is very large for such a small rodent) negligibly grows with age. The same is true for modern people in developed countries below the age of 60. It is important that the juvenilization of traits that separate humans from chimpanzees evolved over thousands of generations and millions of years. Rapid advances in technology resulted in a sharp increase in the life expectancy of human beings during the past 100 years. Currently, the human life expectancy has exceeded 80 years in developed countries. It cannot be excluded that the potential for increasing life expectancy by an improvement in living conditions will be exhausted after a certain period of time. New types of geroprotectors should be developed that protect not only from chronic phenoptosis gradual poisoning of the body with reactive oxygen species (ROS) but also from acute phenoptosis, where strong increase in the level of ROS immediately kills an already aged individual. Geroprotectors might be another anti-aging strategy along with neoteny (a natural physiological phenomenon) and technical progress.Entities:
Keywords: aging; anti-aging drugs; demography; life expectancy; neoteny
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32229707 PMCID: PMC7138562 DOI: 10.18632/aging.102981
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.955
Figure 1(A) from [44], with minor modifications. Yearly mortality of captive and wild chimpanzees [data from 43] and Ache Indians of Paraguay [32]). (B) from [47]. Survival of chimpanzees in the wild and the survival of various wild tribes of South America, Africa and Asia, and Swedes in 1751-1759.
Figure 2The lifespan equality and life expectancy in humans (black and green) and non-human primates (blue) (from [ The y axis shows lifespan equality, the log of the inverse of the Keyfitz’s entropy; corresponding values of the Keyftiz’s entropy are given in parentheses on the y axis.
Figure 3(A) Age-dependent survival of Swedish individuals (in 1751, 1850, 1900, 1950, and 2010) and of Ache Indians and chimpanzees (according to [50, 51] with modifications). (B) Mortality structure in the USA (10 main causes of death in 1900 and 2010) [52].