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Distinguishing between driver and passenger mechanisms of aging.

João Pedro de Magalhães
Published in: Nature genetics (2024)
Understanding why we age is a long-standing question, and many mechanistic theories of aging have been proposed. Owing to limitations in studying the aging process, including a lack of adequate quantitative measurements, its mechanistic basis remains a subject of debate. Here, I explore theories of aging from the perspective of causal relationships. Many aging-related changes have been observed and touted as drivers of aging, including molecular changes in the genome, telomeres, mitochondria, epigenome and proteins and cellular changes affecting stem cells, the immune system and senescent cell buildup. Determining which changes are drivers and not passengers of aging remains a challenge, however, and I discuss how animal models and human genetic studies have been used empirically to infer causality. Overall, our understanding of the drivers of human aging is still inadequate; yet with a global aging population, elucidating the causes of aging has the potential to revolutionize biomedical research.
Keyphrases
  • stem cells
  • endothelial cells
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • climate change
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry
  • cell therapy
  • single molecule
  • endoplasmic reticulum