| Literature DB >> 34543232 |
Alibek Moldakozhayev1,2,3, Albina Tskhay4, Vadim N Gladyshev5.
Abstract
Aging is debatably one of the biggest mysteries for humanity, a process consisting of myriads of genetic, molecular, environmental, and stochastic deleterious events, leading to a progressive loss of organism functionality. Aging research currently lacks a common conceptual framework, and one challenge in establishing it is the fact that aging is a highly complex process. To help develop a framework of standard aging rules, we suggest the use of deductive reasoning based on particle physics' principles. Specifically, the principles that we suggest applying to study aging are discreteness of processes, transformation as a result of interaction, and understanding of threshold. Using this framework, biological aging may be described as a sequence of highly discrete molecular transformations caused by a combination of various specific internal and external factors. Internal organismal function and interaction of an organism with the environment result in chronic accumulation of molecular damage and other deleterious consequences of metabolism and the consequent loss of system's functionality. The loss of functionality occurs as a series of thresholds the organism reaches before it turns into an utterly non-functional state. We discuss how having a common ground may benefit aging research, introduce the logic of new principles and analyze specific examples of how this framework could be used to study aging and design longevity interventions.Entities:
Keywords: aging; damage; framework; particle physics; theory
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34543232 PMCID: PMC8507302 DOI: 10.18632/aging.203555
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.955
Types of elementary particles, particles-carriers of interaction, and interaction.
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| Up, charm, top |
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| Down, strange, bottom |
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| Electron, muon, tau |
| Electron neutrino, muon neutrino, tau neutrino | |
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| Gluon – strong nuclear force-carrier | |
| Photon – electromagnetic force-carrier | |
| Z boson – weak nuclear force-carrier | |
| W boson – weak nuclear force-carrier | |
| Higgs boson - responsible for the emergence of mass |
Figure 1Schematic representation of an interaction-transformation principle. Upper case letters represent objects; lower case letters represent interaction/force carriers. Transformation of objects (A to C, B to D) happens following the interaction driven by carriers (a and b). The interaction results in a change of the physical state of the object. Carrier “a” of object “A”, carrying a part of the physical state of object “A” now becomes a part of object “B”, leading to the transformation of object “B” into object “D” and the other way around.