|
|
|
|
|
by johncearls
1477 days ago
|
|
Telomeres get a lot of press, but they are only one Hallmark of aging. Other possible related hallmarks I see in this include stem cell exhaustion, epigenetic disregulation, genomic instability and altered cell signaling. Note I have not read the paper and they may have identified other novel mechanisms. If this is a topic you find interesting, I recommend you Google hallmarks of aging. Morgan Levine also has a new book out that gives a nice overview of all the different ways the body messes up as it ages. |
|
if you plug stem cell exhaustion and "telomere" into google, they have relationships in the literature:
> epigenetic disregulationif you plug epigenetic disregulation and "telomere" into google, they have relationships in the literature.
> genomic instability
if you plug genomic instability and "telomere" into google, not surprisingly they have relationship.
> altered cell signaling
I think you can guess what I'm going to say here.
I'm not a cell biologist. I certainly don't think telomeres are the smoking gnu of all of this, but there are indications the commonality of how telomeres alter DNA expression, and the centrality of DNA processing to renew cell function come to the fore: if you don't have a valid end-cap on the instruction set, it may not reproduce accurately which affects all the cellular processes which stem from it's reproduction and application. (a massively overplayed analogy to the digital domain, which is a bit bogus)
> stem cell