Dictionary Definition
senescence
Noun
1 the organic process of growing older and
showing the effects of increasing age [syn: aging, ageing]
2 the property characteristic of old age [syn:
agedness]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
senescence- The state or process of ageing, esp. in humans; old age
- (cell biology) Ceasing to divide by mitosis because of shortening of telomeres or excessive DNA damage
- (gerontology) old age; accumulated damage to macromolecules, cells, tissues and organs with the passage of time
- Fruit senescence,leading to ripening of fruit,generally.
Extensive Definition
Senescence refers to the biological processes of
a living organism
approaching an advanced age (i.e., the combination of processes of
deterioration which follow the period of development of an
organism). The word senescence is derived from the Latin word
senex, meaning "old man" or "old age" or "advanced in age".
Cellular senescence
Cellular senescence is the phenomenon where normal diploid differentiated cells lose the ability to divide after about 50 cell divisions. This phenomenon is also known as "replicative senescence", the "Hayflick phenomenon", or the Hayflick limit in honour of Dr. Leonard Hayflick who was the first to publish this information in 1965. In response to DNA damage (including shortened telomeres) cells either age or self-destruct (apoptosis, programmed cell death) if the damage cannot be repaired. In this 'cellular suicide', the death of one, or more, cells may benefit the organism as a whole. For example, in plants the death of the water-conducting xylem cells (tracheids and vessel elements) allows the cells to function more efficiently and so deliver water to the upper parts of a plant.Aging of the whole organism
Organismal senescence is the aging of whole
organisms. The term aging has become so commonly equated with
senescence that the terms will be used interchangeably in this
article.
Aging is generally
characterized by the declining ability to respond to stress,
increasing homeostatic imbalance and
increased risk of aging-associated
diseases. Because of this, death is the ultimate consequence
of aging. Differences in maximum
life span among species correspond to different "rates of
aging". For example, inherited
differences in the rate of aging make a mouse elderly at 3 years and a
human elderly at 90 years.
These genetic differences affect a variety of physiological
processes, including the efficiency of DNA repair,
antioxidant enzymes, and rates of free
radical production.
Senescence of the organism gives rise to the
Gompertz-Makeham law of mortality, which says that mortality
rate rises rapidly with age.
Some animals, such as some reptiles and fish, age
slowly. Some even exhibit "negative senescence", in which mortality
falls with age, in disagreement with the Gompertz-Makeham
"law".
Theories of aging
The process of senescence is complex, and may
derive from a variety of different mechanisms and exist for a
variety of different reasons. However, senescence is not universal,
and scientific evidence suggests that cellular senescence evolved
in certain species as a
mechanism to prevent the onset of cancer. In a few simple species,
senescence is negligible and cannot be detected. All such species
have no "post-mitotic"
cells; they reduce the effect of damaging free
radicals by cell division and dilution. Such species are not
immortal, however, as they will eventually fall prey to trauma or
disease. Moreover,
average lifespans can vary greatly within and between species. This suggests that both
genetic
and environmental factors contribute to aging.
Traditionally, theories that explain senescence
have generally been divided between the programmed and stochastic theories of aging.
Programmed theories imply that aging is regulated by biological
clocks operating throughout the life span. This regulation would
depend on changes in gene
expression that affect the systems responsible for maintenance,
repair and defense responses. Stochastic theories blame
environmental impacts on living organisms that induce cumulative
damage at various levels as the cause of aging, examples which
range from damage to DNA,
damage to tissues and cells by oxygen radicals
(widely known as free
radicals countered by the even more well known antioxidants), and cross-linking.
Conversely, aging is seen as a progressive
failure of homeodynamics
(homeostasis) involving genes for the maintenance and repair,
stochastic events leading to molecular damage and molecular
heterogeneity, and chance events determining the probability of
death. Since complex and interacting systems of maintenance and
repair comprise the homeodynamic (old term, homeostasis) space of a
biological system, aging is considered to be a progressive
shrinkage of homeodynamic space mainly due to increased molecular
heterogeneity.
Evolutionary theories
Aging is believed to have evolved because of the increasingly smaller probability of an organism still being alive at older age, due to predation and accidents, both of which may be random and age-invariant. It is thought that strategies which result in a higher reproductive rate at a young age, but shorter overall lifespan, result in a higher lifetime reproductive success and are therefore favoured by natural selection. Essentially, aging is therefore the result of investing resources in reproduction, rather than maintenance of the body (the "Disposable Soma" theory), in light of the fact that accidents, predation and disease will eventually kill the organism no matter how much energy is devoted to repair of the body. Various other, or more specific, theories of ageing exist, and are not necessarily mutually exclusive.The geneticist J. B. S.
Haldane wondered why the dominant mutation which causes
Huntington's
disease remained in the population, why natural selection had
not eliminated it. The onset of this neurological disease is (on
average) at age 45 and is invariably fatal within 10-20 years.
Haldane assumed, probably reasonably, that in human prehistory, few
survived until age 45. Since few were alive at older ages and their
contribution to the next generation was therefore small relative to
the large cohorts of younger age groups, the force of selection
against such late-acting deleterious mutations was correspondingly
small. However if a mutation affected younger individuals,
selection against it would be strong. Therefore, late-acting
deleterious mutations could accumulate in populations over
evolutionary time through genetic
drift. This principle has been demonstrated experimentally. And
it is these later-acting deleterious mutations which are believed
to cause, or perhaps more correctly allow, age-related
mortality.
Peter
Medawar formalised this observation in his
mutation accumulation theory of ageing . "The force of natural
selection weakens with increasing age — even in a theoretically
immortal population, provided only that it is exposed to real
hazards of mortality. If a genetic disaster... happens late enough
in individual life, its consequences may be completely
unimportant". The 'real hazards of mortality' are typically
predation, disease and accidents. So, even an immortal population,
whose fertility does not decline with time, will have fewer
individuals alive in older age groups. This is called 'extrinsic
mortality.' Young cohorts, not depleted in numbers yet by
extrinsic
mortality, contribute far more to the next generation than the
few remaining older cohorts, so the force of selection against
late-acting deleterious mutations, which only affect these few
older individuals, is very weak. The mutations may not be selected
against, therefore, and may spread over evolutionary time into the
population.
The major testable prediction made by this model
is that species which have high extrinsic
mortality in nature will age more quickly and have shorter
intrinsic
lifespans. This is borne out among mammals, the most well
studied in terms of life history. There is a correlation among
mammals between body size and lifespan, such that larger
species live longer than smaller species in controlled/optimum
conditions, but there are notable exceptions. For instance, many
bats and rodents are similarly sized, yet bats live much, much
longer. For instance, the little
brown bat, half the size of a mouse, can live 30 years in the
wild. A mouse will live 2–3 years even with optimum conditions. The
explanation is that bats have fewer predators, so therefore low
extrinsic
mortality. Thus more individuals survive to later ages so the
force of selection against late-acting deleterious mutations is
stronger. Fewer late-acting deleterious mutations = slower ageing =
longer lifespan. Birds are also warm-blooded and similarly sized to
many small mammals, yet live often 5–10 times as long. They clearly
have fewer predation pressures compared with ground-dwelling
mammals. And seabirds,
which generally have the fewest predators of all birds, live
longest.
Also, when examining the body-size vs. lifespan
relationship, predator mammals tend to have longer lifespans than
prey animals in a controlled environment such as a zoo or nature
reserve. The explanation for the long lifespans of primates (such
as humans, monkeys and apes) relative to body size is that their
intelligence and often sociality helps them avoid becoming prey.
Being a predator, being smart and working together all reduce
extrinsic
mortality.
Another evolutionary theory of ageing was
proposed by George
C. Williams (Williams 1957) and involves antagonistic pleiotropy. A single gene may
affect multiple traits. Some traits that increase fitness early in
life may also have negative effects later in life. But because many
more individuals are alive at young ages than at old ages, even
small positive effects early can be strongly selected for, and
large negative effects later may be very weakly selected against.
Williams suggested the following example: perhaps a gene codes for
calcium deposition in bones which promotes juvenile survival and
will therefore be favored by natural selection; however this same
gene promotes calcium deposition in the arteries, causing negative
effects in old age. Therefore negative effects in old age may
reflect the result of natural selection for pleiotropic genes which are
beneficial early in life. In this case, fitness is relatively high
when
Fisher's reproductive value is high and relatively low when
Fisher's reproductive value is low.
Gene regulation
A number of genetic components of aging have been identified using model organisms, ranging from the simple budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to worms such as Caenorhabditis elegans and fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster). Study of these organisms has revealed the presence of at least two conserved aging pathways.One of these pathways involves the gene Sir2, a
NAD+-dependent histone deacetylase. In yeast, Sir2 is required
for genomic silencing at three loci: the yeast mating loci,
the telomeres and the
ribosomal
DNA (rDNA). In some species of yeast replicative aging may be
partially caused by homologous
recombination between rDNA repeats; excision
of rDNA repeats results in the formation of extrachromosomal rDNA
circles (ERCs). These ERCs replicate and preferentially segregate
to the mother cell during cell division, and are believed to result
in cellular senescence by titrating away (competing for)
essential nuclear
factors. ERCs have not been observed in other species of yeast
(which also display replicative senescence), and ERCs are not
believed to contribute to aging in higher organisms such as humans.
Extrachromosomal circular DNA (eccDNA) has been found in worms,
flies and humans. The role of eccDNA in aging, if any, is
unknown.
Despite the lack of a connection between circular
DNA and aging in higher
organisms, extra copies of Sir2 are capable of extending the
lifespan of both worms and flies. The mechanisms by which Sir2
homologues in higher organisms regulate lifespan is unclear, but
the human SIRT1 protein has been demonstrated to deacetylate p53, Ku70, and the
forkhead
family of transcription
factors. SIRT1 can also regulate acetylates such as CBP/p300, and has
been shown to deacetylate specific histone residues.
RAS1 and RAS2 also affect aging in yeast and have
a human homologue. RAS2 overexpression has been shown to extend
lifespan in yeast.
Other genes regulate aging in yeast by increasing
the resistance to oxidative
stress. Superoxide
dismutase, a protein
that protects against the effects of mitochondrial free radicals,
can extend yeast lifespan in stationary phase when
overexpressed.
In higher organisms, aging is likely to be
regulated in part through the insulin/IGF-1 pathway. Mutations that
affect insulin-like
signaling in worms, flies and mice are associated with extended
lifespan. In yeast, Sir2 activity is regulated by the
nicotinamidase PNC1. PNC1 is transcriptionally upregulated under stressful
conditions such as caloric
restriction, heat shock,
and osmotic
shock. By converting nicotinamide to niacin, it removes nicotinamide,
which inhibits the activity of Sir2. A nicotinamidase found in
humans, known as PBEF, may serve a
similar function, and a secreted form of PBEF known as visfatin may help to regulate
serum insulin levels. It
is not known, however, whether these mechanisms also exist in
humans since there are obvious differences in biology between
humans and model organisms.
Sir2 activity has been shown to increase under
calorie restriction. Due to the lack of available glucose in the
cells more NAD+ is available and can activate Sir2. Resveratrol, a
polyphenol found in
the skin of red grapes,
was reported to extend the lifespan of yeast, worms, and flies. It
has been shown to activate Sir2 activity and therefore mimics the
effects of calorie restriction.
Gene expression is imperfectly controlled, and it
is possible that random fluctuations in the expression levels of
many genes contribute to the aging process (Ryley, J. 2006).
Individual cells, which are genetically identical, none-the-less
can have substantially different responses to outside stimuli, and
markedly different lifespans, indicating the epigenetic factors
play an important role in gene expression and aging as well as
genetic factors.
This is a list of confirmed longevity genes from
model
animals. The major genetic model organisms used in aging
research are the filamentous fungus (Podospora
anserina), bakers' yeast (Saccharomyces
cerevisiae), the soil roundworm (Caenorhabditis
elegans), the fruit fly (Drosophila
melanogaster), and the mouse (Mus
musculus).
Cellular senescence
As noted above, senescence is not universal, and
senescence is not observed in single-celled organisms that
reproduce through the process of cellular mitosis . Moreover, cellular
senescence is not observed in many organisms, including perennial plants, sponges,
corals, and lobsters. In those species where
cellular senescence is observed, cells eventually become
post-mitotic when they
can no longer replicate themselves through the process of cellular mitosis -- i.e., cells
experience replicative senescence. How and why some cells become
post-mitotic in some species has been the subject of much research
and speculation, but (as noted above) it is widely believed that
cellular senescence evolved as a way to prevent the onset and
spread of cancer.
Somatic
cells that have divided many times will have accumulated DNA mutations and would therefore
be in danger of becoming cancerous if cell division
continued.
Lately the role of telomeres in cellular
senescence has aroused general interest, especially with a view to
the possible genetically adverse effects of cloning. The successive
shortening of the chromosomal telomeres with
each cell
cycle is also believed to limit the number of divisions of the
cell, thus contributing to aging. There have, on the other hand,
also been reports that cloning could alter the shortening of
telomeres. Some cells do not age and are therefore described as
being "biologically
immortal." It is theorized by some that when it is discovered
exactly what allows these cells, whether it be the result of
telomere lengthening or not, to divide without limit that it will
be possible to genetically alter other cells to have the same
capability. It is further theorized that it will eventually be
possible to genetically
engineer all cells in the human body to have this capability by
employing gene therapy
and thereby stop or reverse aging, effectively making the entire
organism potentially immortal.
Cancer cells are
usually immortal. This evasion of cellular senescence is the
result, in about 85% of tumors, of up-activation of their telomerase genes . This
simple observation suggests that reactivation of telomerases in
healthy individuals could greatly increase their cancer risk.
Chemical damage
The earliest aging theory was the Rate of Living
Hypothesis described by Raymond
Pearl in 1928, based on the idea that fast basal
metabolic rate corresponds to short maximum
life span (much as a rapidly running machine will experience
more damage from wear). (The idea had been posited earlier by
Max
Rubner).
While there is likely some validity to this
theory, in the form of various types of specific damage detailed
below which, all other things being equal may reduce lifespan, in
general this theory does not adequately explain the differences in
lifespan either within, or between, species. Calorically-restricted
animals process as much, or more, calories per gram of body mass,
as their ad libitum fed counterparts, yet exhibit substantially
longer lifespans. Similarly, metabolic rate is a poor predictor of
lifespan for birds, bats and other species which presumably have
reduced mortality from predation, and therefore have evolved long
lifespans even in the presence of very high metabolic rates.
With respect to specific types of chemical damage
caused by metabolism, it is suggested that damage to long-lived
biopolymers, such as
structural proteins or
DNA, caused by
ubiquitous chemical agents in the body such as oxygen and sugars, are in part responsible
for aging. The damage can include breakage of biopolymer chains,
cross-linking
of biopolymers, or chemical attachment of unnatural substituents
(haptens) to
biopolymers.
Under normal aerobic conditions,
approximately 4% of the oxygen metabolized by mitochondria is converted
to superoxide ion
which can subsequently be converted to hydrogen
peroxide, hydroxyl
radical
and eventually other reactive species including other peroxides and singlet
oxygen, which can in turn generate free
radicals capable of damaging structural proteins and DNA.
Certain metal ions found in
the body, such as copper
and iron, may participate
in the process. (In Wilson's
disease, a hereditary
defect which causes the body to retain copper, some of the
symptoms resemble accelerated senescence.) These processes are
termed oxidative damage and are linked to the benefits of
nutritionally derived polyphenol
antioxidants .
Sugars such as
glucose and fructose can react with certain
amino
acids such as lysine
and arginine and
certain DNA bases such as guanine to produce sugar
adducts, in a process called glycation. These adducts can
further rearrange to form reactive species which can then
cross-link the structural proteins or DNA to similar biopolymers or
other biomolecules such as non-structural proteins. People with
diabetes, who have
elevated blood sugar,
develop senescence-associated disorders much earlier than the
general population, but can delay such disorders by rigorous
control of their blood sugar levels. There is evidence that sugar
damage is linked to oxidant damage in a process termed
glycoxidation.
Free
radicals can damage proteins, lipids or DNA. Glycation mainly
damages proteins. Damaged proteins and lipids accumulate in
lysosomes as lipofuscin. Chemical damage
to structural proteins can lead to loss of function; for example,
damage to collagen of
blood
vessel walls can lead to vessel-wall stiffness and thus
hypertension, and
vessel wall thickening and reactive tissue formation (atherosclerosis);
similar processes in the kidney can lead to renal
failure. Damage to enzymes reduces cellular
functionality. Lipid peroxidation of the inner mitochondrial membrane
reduces the electric
potential and the ability to generate energy. It is probably no
accident that nearly all of the so-called "accelerated
aging diseases" are due to defective DNA repair
enzymes.
It is believed that the
impact of alcohol on aging can be partly explained by alcohol's
activation of the HPA axis, which
stimulates glucocorticoid secretion;
long-term exposure to which produces symptoms of aging.
Reliability theory
Reliability theory suggests that biological systems start their adult life with a high load of initial damage. Reliability theory is a general theory about systems failure. It allows researchers to predict the age-related failure kinetics for a system of given architecture (reliability structure) and given reliability of its components. Reliability theory predicts that even those systems that are entirely composed of non-aging elements (with a constant failure rate) will nevertheless deteriorate (fail more often) with age, if these systems are redundant in irreplaceable elements. Aging, therefore, is a direct consequence of systems redundancy.Reliability theory also predicts the
late-life mortality deceleration with subsequent leveling-off,
as well as the late-life mortality plateaus, as an inevitable
consequence of redundancy
exhaustion at extreme old ages. The theory explains why
mortality rates increase exponentially with age (the Gompertz
law) in many species, by taking into account the initial flaws
(defects) in newly formed systems. It also explains why organisms
"prefer" to die according to the Gompertz
law, while technical devices usually fail according to the
Weibull
(power) law. Reliability theory allows to specify conditions when
organisms die according to the Weibull
law: organisms should be relatively free of initial flaws and
defects. The theory makes it possible to find a general failure law
applicable to all adult and extreme old ages, where the Gompertz
and the Weibull laws are just special cases of this more general
failure law. The theory explains why relative differences in
mortality rates of compared populations (within a given species)
vanish with age (compensation
law of mortality), and mortality convergence is observed due to
the exhaustion of initial differences in redundancy levels.
Neuro-endocrine-immunological theories
Senescence may also simply be a result of wear
and tear overwhelming repair mechanisms. It is also possible that
senescence is a mechanism to control the development and spread of
cancer; if cells have
built-in limits to how many times they can replicate, they must
somehow overcome this before they can spread indefinitely.
Miscellaneous
Recently, early senescence has been alleged to be
a possible unintended outcome of early cloning experiments. Most
notably, the issue was raised in the case of Dolly the
sheep, following her death from a contagious lung disease. The
claim that Dolly's early death involved premature senescence has
been vigorously contested (e.g. by Kerry
Lynn Macintosh in her book, Illegal Beings: Human Clones and
the Law), and Dolly's creator, Dr. Ian
Wilmut has expressed the view that her illness and death were
probably unrelated to the fact that she was a clone.
A set of rare hereditary (genetic) disorders, each called
progeria, has been
known for some time. Sufferers exhibit symptoms resembling accelerated
aging, including wrinkled skin. The cause of Hutchinson–Gilford
progeria syndrome was reported in the journal Nature
in May 2003. This report suggests that DNA damage,
not oxidative
stress, is the cause of this form of accelerated aging.
See also
- Advanced adult
- Aging
- Aging and memory
- Aging-associated diseases
- Aging brain
- Aging DNA
- Aging Research Centre
- American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine
- American Aging Association
- American Federation for Aging Research
- Biogerontology
- Biological immortality
- Calorie restriction
- DNA damage theory of aging
- DNA repair
- Evolution of ageing
- Engineered negligible senescence
- Fisher's reproductive value
- Indefinite lifespan
- Life extension
- List of life extension-related topics
- Maximum life span
- Mitohormesis
- Network Theory of Aging
- Plant senescence
- Progeria
- Real death
- Rejuvenation
- Reliability theory of aging and longevity
- SAGE KE
- Sub-lethal damage
References
External links
- AgeLab (MIT).
- Aging Research Centre (ARC)
- American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine
- American Federation for Aging Research
- Cellular Senescence Information Center
- Evolutionary Theories of Aging and Longevity
- Gerontology Research Group Site also has the official tables of known supercentenarians.
- Leibniz Institute for Age Research - Fritz Lipmann Institute (FLI)
- Longevity Meme (Longevity Activism)
- Mechanisms of Aging
- New Books on Aging and Longevity Studies
- Ouroboros Anti-Aging Research News Written by scientists for scientists
- Reliability Theory of Aging and Longevity
- Resourses and Articles on the Biology of Aging and Life-Extension
- 54 Scientists' Open Letter on Aging Research
- Scientific American: Loss of Anticancer Gene Retards Aging in Stem Cells
- senescence.infoEducational resource on the science of aging.
- Ageing Research Blog
senescence in Arabic: هرم (فيزيولوجيا)
senescence in German: Biogerontologie
senescence in Spanish: Envejecimiento
senescence in French: Sénescence
senescence in Korean: 노화
senescence in Japanese: 老化
senescence in Polish: Proces starzenia się
senescence in Portuguese: Senescência
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