Open Access
Open access
Experimental Gerontology, volume 36, issue 4-6, pages 607-618

From cells to organisms: can we learn about aging from cells in culture?

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2001-04-01
scimago Q1
SJR1.051
CiteScore7.3
Impact factor3.3
ISSN05315565, 18736815
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
Cell Biology
Genetics
Endocrinology
Aging
Abstract
Can studying cultured cells inform us about the biology of aging? The idea that this may be was stimulated by the first formal description of replicative senescence. Replicative senescence limits the proliferation of normal human cells in culture, causing them to irreversibly arrest growth and adopt striking changes in cell function. We now know that telomere shortening, which occurs in most somatic cells as a consequence of DNA replication, drives replicative senescence in human cells. However, rodent cells also undergo replicative senescence, despite very long telomeres, and DNA damage, the action of certain oncogenes and changes in chromatin induce a phenotype similar to that of replicatively senescent cells. Thus, replicative senescence is an example of the more general process of cellular senescence, indicating that the telomere hypothesis of aging is a misnomer, Cellular senescence appears to be a response to potentially oncogenic insults, including oxidative stress. The growth arrest almost certainly suppresses tumorigenesis, at least in young organisms, whereas the functional changes may contribute to aging, although this has yet to be critically tested. Thus, cellular senescence may be an example of antagonistic pleiotropy. Cross-species comparisons suggest there is a relationship between the senescence of cells in culture and organismal life span, but the relationship is neither quantitative nor direct.
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