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Molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective

The role of cellular senescence (CS) in age-related diseases (ARDs) is a quickly emerging topic in aging research. Our comprehensive data mining revealed over 250 genes tightly associated with CS. Using systems biology tools, we found that CS is closely interconnected with aging, longevity and ARDs,...

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Autores principales: Tacutu, Robi, Budovsky, Arie, Yanai, Hagai, Fraifeld, Vadim E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3273898/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22184282
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author Tacutu, Robi
Budovsky, Arie
Yanai, Hagai
Fraifeld, Vadim E.
author_facet Tacutu, Robi
Budovsky, Arie
Yanai, Hagai
Fraifeld, Vadim E.
author_sort Tacutu, Robi
collection PubMed
description The role of cellular senescence (CS) in age-related diseases (ARDs) is a quickly emerging topic in aging research. Our comprehensive data mining revealed over 250 genes tightly associated with CS. Using systems biology tools, we found that CS is closely interconnected with aging, longevity and ARDs, either by sharing common genes and regulators or by protein-protein interactions and eventually by common signaling pathways. The most enriched pathways across CS, ARDs and aging-associated conditions (oxidative stress and chronic inflammation) are growth-promoting pathways and the pathways responsible for cell-extracellular matrix interactions and stress response. Of note, the patterns of evolutionary conservation of CS and cancer genes showed a high degree of similarity, suggesting the co-evolution of these two phenomena. Moreover, cancer genes and microRNAs seem to stand at the crossroad between CS and ARDs. Our analysis also provides the basis for new predictions: the genes common to both cancer and other ARD(s) are highly likely candidates to be involved in CS and vice versa. Altogether, this study shows that there are multiple links between CS, aging, longevity and ARDs, suggesting a common molecular basis for all these conditions. Modulating CS may represent a potential pro-longevity and anti-ARDs therapeutic strategy.
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spelling pubmed-32738982012-02-14 Molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective Tacutu, Robi Budovsky, Arie Yanai, Hagai Fraifeld, Vadim E. Aging (Albany NY) Research Paper The role of cellular senescence (CS) in age-related diseases (ARDs) is a quickly emerging topic in aging research. Our comprehensive data mining revealed over 250 genes tightly associated with CS. Using systems biology tools, we found that CS is closely interconnected with aging, longevity and ARDs, either by sharing common genes and regulators or by protein-protein interactions and eventually by common signaling pathways. The most enriched pathways across CS, ARDs and aging-associated conditions (oxidative stress and chronic inflammation) are growth-promoting pathways and the pathways responsible for cell-extracellular matrix interactions and stress response. Of note, the patterns of evolutionary conservation of CS and cancer genes showed a high degree of similarity, suggesting the co-evolution of these two phenomena. Moreover, cancer genes and microRNAs seem to stand at the crossroad between CS and ARDs. Our analysis also provides the basis for new predictions: the genes common to both cancer and other ARD(s) are highly likely candidates to be involved in CS and vice versa. Altogether, this study shows that there are multiple links between CS, aging, longevity and ARDs, suggesting a common molecular basis for all these conditions. Modulating CS may represent a potential pro-longevity and anti-ARDs therapeutic strategy. Impact Journals LLC 2011-12-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3273898/ /pubmed/22184282 Text en Copyright: © 2011 Tacutu et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
spellingShingle Research Paper
Tacutu, Robi
Budovsky, Arie
Yanai, Hagai
Fraifeld, Vadim E.
Molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective
title Molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective
title_full Molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective
title_fullStr Molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective
title_full_unstemmed Molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective
title_short Molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective
title_sort molecular links between cellular senescence, longevity and age-related diseases – a systems biology perspective
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3273898/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22184282
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