Cell Aging: Molecular Mechanisms and Implications for Disease von Christian Behl | ISBN 9783642451782

Cell Aging: Molecular Mechanisms and Implications for Disease

von Christian Behl und Christine Ziegler
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinChristian Behl
Autor / AutorinChristine Ziegler
Buchcover Cell Aging: Molecular Mechanisms and Implications for Disease | Christian Behl | EAN 9783642451782 | ISBN 3-642-45178-0 | ISBN 978-3-642-45178-2

From the reviews:

“It is appropriate for graduate students of the biomedical sciences, as well as scientists new to the field of aging. … This is a good introduction to the field of cell aging. … This book provides a thorough, yet brief, review of cell aging through discussions of various mechanisms of aging and age-related diseases and would be useful for a graduate student symposium or newcomers to the field of cell aging.” (Ellen Mary Andrews, Doody’s Book Reviews, April, 2014)

Cell Aging: Molecular Mechanisms and Implications for Disease

von Christian Behl und Christine Ziegler
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinChristian Behl
Autor / AutorinChristine Ziegler

Aging represents a physiological and per se non-pathological and multifactorial process involving a set of key genes and mechanisms being triggered by different endogenous and exogenous factors. Since aging is a major risk factor in connection with a variety of human disorders, it is increasingly becoming a central topic in biochemical and medical research. The plethora of theories on aging – some of which have been discussed for decades – are neither isolated nor contradictory but instead can be connected in a network of pathways and processes at the cellular and molecular levels. This book summarizes the most prominent and important approaches, focusing on telomeres, DNA damage and oxidative stress as well as on the possible role of nutrition, the interplay between genes and environment (epigenetics) and intracellular protein homeostasis and introduces some genes that have actually extended life spans in animal models. Linking these different determinants of aging with disease, this volume aims to reveal their multiple interdependencies. We see that there is no single “perfect” theory of aging and that instead it is possible to define what the authors call the molecular aging matrix of the cell. A better knowledge of its key mechanisms and the mutual connections between its components will lead to a better understanding of age-associated disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease.