Journal Article10.1089/ARS.2021.0074
The many roles mitochondria play in mammalian aging.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review how mitochondrial dysfunction may be involved in many of the known hallmarks of aging, and how these pathways interact in an intricate net of molecular relationships.
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Abstract: Significance Aging is a natural process that affects most living organisms, resulting in increased mortality. As the world population ages, the prevalence of age-associated diseases, and their associated healthcare costs, has increased sharply. A better understanding of the molecular mechanisms that lead to cellular dysfunction may provide important targets for interventions to prevent or treat these diseases. Recent Advances: Although the mitochondrial theory of aging has been proposed over 40 years ago, recent new data has given stronger support for a central role for mitochondrial dysfunction in several pathways that are deregulated during normal aging and age-associated disease. Critical issues Several of the experimental evidence linking mitochondrial alterations to age-associated loss of function are correlative and mechanistic insight are still elusive. Here, we review how mitochondrial dysfunction may be involved in many of the known hallmarks of aging, and how these pathways interact in an intricate net of molecular relationships. Future directions As it has become clear that mitochondrial dysfunction plays causative roles in normal aging and age-associated diseases, it is necessary to better define the molecular interactions and the temporal and causal relations between these changes and the relevant phenotypes seen during the aging process.
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