Epigenetics of aging and aging-related disease

A Brunet, SL Berger - Journals of Gerontology Series A …, 2014 - academic.oup.com
Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biomedical Sciences and Medical …, 2014academic.oup.com
Aging is associated with a wide range of human disorders, including cancer, diabetes,
cardiovascular, and neurodegenerative diseases. Long thought to be an inexorable road
toward decline and diseases, aging is in fact remarkably plastic. Such plasticity could be
harnessed to approach age-related diseases from a novel perspective. Although many
studies have focused on the genes that impact aging, the nongenetic regulation of aging is
gaining increasing attention. Specifically, aging is associated with profound epigenetic …
Abstract
Aging is associated with a wide range of human disorders, including cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular, and neurodegenerative diseases. Long thought to be an inexorable road toward decline and diseases, aging is in fact remarkably plastic. Such plasticity could be harnessed to approach age-related diseases from a novel perspective. Although many studies have focused on the genes that impact aging, the nongenetic regulation of aging is gaining increasing attention. Specifically, aging is associated with profound epigenetic changes, resulting in alterations of gene expression and disturbances in broad genome architecture and the epigenomic landscape. The potential reversibility of these epigenetic changes that occur as a hallmark of aging offers exciting opportunities to alter the trajectory of age-related diseases. This short review highlights key epigenetic players in the regulation of aging, as well as both future goals and challenges to the utilization of epigenetic strategies to delay and reverse the main diseases of aging.
Oxford University Press
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果