Mechanisms of ageing

被引:0
|
作者
Alexander Bürkle
机构
[1] University of Newcastle,Department of Gerontology
[2] upon Tyne,undefined
[3] IAH,undefined
[4] Wolfson Research Centre,undefined
[5] Newcastle General Hospital,undefined
来源
Eye | 2001年 / 15卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent experimental work from a variety of biological systems, ranging from yeast to human beings, lends increasing support to the view that stochastic damage inflicted to biological macromolecules is the driving force for the ageing process. The damage is derived from small reactive molecules, most prominently reactive oxygen intermediates (ROD, that arise during normal cellular metabolism and are associated with important if not essential cellular functions. The major classes of macromolecules at risk are proteins, lipids and DNA, but damage to DNA (both nuclear and mitochondrial) may entail particularly severe consequences. Cellular dysfunction resulting from macromolecular damage can be detected as a variety of expressions, such as genomic instability, inappropriate cell differentiation events or cell death. While for post-mitotic cell types replacement of the dead cell by another cell of the same lineage is not possible, mitotic cell types may initially replace dead cells via cell proliferation. But exhaustion of the self-renewal capacity of the respective lineage, by either replication-associated or damage-associated telomere shortening, will ultimately also lead to loss of parenchymal cell mass and functional impairment of tissues, the latter being a typical feature of ageing of tissues and organs. It has been demonstrated in various experimental systems that the rate ageing of can be retarded by lowering the production of endogenous ROI or by improving cellular anti-oxidative defences. Whether augmentation of cellular DNA repair capacity will have the same effect remains to be seen.
引用
收藏
页码:371 / 375
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mechanisms of ageing
    Bürkle, A
    EYE, 2001, 15 (3) : 371 - 375
  • [2] MECHANISMS OF AGEING
    GEDDA, L
    BRENCI, G
    LANCET, 1970, 2 (7680): : 981 - &
  • [3] Ageing mechanisms of nitroethylbenzenes
    Cunningham, Ian D.
    Ridge, Katerina
    Lockley, William
    Jenkins, Peter
    McNaghten, Edward D.
    Seagrave, Neil
    JOURNAL OF ENERGETIC MATERIALS, 2019, 37 (02) : 188 - 198
  • [4] Mechanisms of seed ageing
    Kranner, I.
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2013, 86 : 140 - 140
  • [5] Cellular mechanisms of ageing
    Kirkwood, TBL
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY, 1999, 126 : U159 - U159
  • [6] Mechanisms of Ageing and Longevity
    Brunet, A.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2012, 48 : S8 - S8
  • [7] Symposium on Mechanisms of Ageing and Longevity
    Cowen, T
    JOURNAL OF ANATOMY, 2000, 197 : I - I
  • [8] Mechanisms underlying resilience in ageing
    Stern, Yaakov
    Chetelat, Gael
    Habeck, Christian
    Arenaza-Urquijo, Eider M.
    Vemuri, Prashanthi
    Estanga, Ainara
    Bartres-Faz, David
    Cantillon, Marc
    Clouston, Sean A. P.
    Elman, Jeremy A.
    Gold, Brian T.
    Jones, Richard
    Kempermann, Gerd
    Lim, Yen Ying
    Van Loenhoud, Anita
    Martinez-Lage, Pablo
    Morbelli, Silvia
    Okonkwo, Ozioma
    Ossenkoppele, Rik
    Pettigrew, Corinne
    Rosen, Allyson C.
    Scarmeas, Nikolaos
    Soldan, Anja
    Udeh-Momoh, Chinedu
    Valenzuela, Michael
    Vuoksimaa, Eero
    NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE, 2019, 20 (04) : 246 - 246
  • [9] Cellular ageing mechanisms in osteoarthritis
    Sacitharan, P. K.
    Vincent, T. L.
    MAMMALIAN GENOME, 2016, 27 (7-8) : 421 - 429
  • [10] The pathology of ageing: concepts and mechanisms
    Martin, J. E.
    T Sheaff, M.
    JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY, 2007, 211 (02): : 111 - 113