Topic is moderated, (CIRA) all serious contributions welcome.
Question:
In a sentence, what is your favorite definition of aging?
Posted 15 March 2005 - 06:19 PM
Posted 15 March 2005 - 06:35 PM
So a thirty-year-old, for example, is more or less in as good condition in terms of how they work, as a twenty-year-old. But we know there is something subtly different about the thirty-year-old because the thirty-year-old has a shorter remaining life expectancy.
If all you get is one sentence, that would be the one.Aging is a side effect of being alive in the first place.
Posted 15 March 2005 - 08:12 PM
Posted 18 March 2005 - 05:05 PM
Posted 18 March 2005 - 05:18 PM
Posted 18 March 2005 - 06:56 PM
Posted 18 March 2005 - 08:07 PM
Not very descriptive and arguably untrue.Aging is a side effect of being alive in the first place
Thats a rather good one. Firstly, I'm not sure about the entropic part, but one could leave that out. Self-renewal: In what sense do "immortal" cells self-renew when they divide? The crucial point here is "disorder" and that is probably in need of definition.Aging is the entropic increase in the disorder of a biological system which negatively affects its capacity for self-renewal eventually leading to system collapse.
I like the combination but it bears some of the sins of its parents. Universal does not help, even if meant to apply to only the individuum. Molecular fidelity? Thats contentious. How do you distinguish from other types of metabolic pathology? Environmental stressors: well, if you count enery as an evironmental stressor..."Aging is the universal, progressive, and deleterious process of escalating loss of molecular fidelity with age, resulting stochastically from the intrinsic metabolic processes of the organism, that degrades its ability to maintain homeostasis in the face of environmental stressors, leading to increased vulnerability to pathology and mortality."
Are you ok BJ?aging is fucked
I suggest a 150 and a 400 character limit, the former for a quick and dirty category, and the latter for a more descriptive but still succinct category.
Any change in an organism over time. (Bowen & Atwood 2004)
changes with time during postmaturational life which underlie the increasing vulnerability to challenges and thereby the decreasing ability of the organism to survive. (Maroso 1998)
The collection of changes that render human beings progressively more likely to die (Medawar, 1952).
the increase of mortality q(x) for ages x after childhood where mortality is a derivative q(x) = −d ln S(x)=dx (1) where S is the number of survivors at age x. (Gompertz 19th century)
nondescript colloquialism that can mean any change over time (Finch 1990)
Edited by caliban, 18 March 2005 - 10:38 PM.
Posted 18 March 2005 - 09:11 PM
Posted 18 March 2005 - 10:36 PM
Posted 18 March 2005 - 10:42 PM
Posted 19 March 2005 - 12:50 AM
Posted 19 March 2005 - 05:21 AM
Posted 19 March 2005 - 05:35 AM
Posted 24 March 2005 - 10:00 PM
Posted 25 March 2005 - 03:28 AM
Edited by John Schloendorn, 25 March 2005 - 04:12 AM.
Posted 25 March 2005 - 03:48 AM
Posted 25 March 2005 - 04:19 AM
Posted 27 March 2005 - 07:46 AM
Posted 19 April 2005 - 01:23 PM
An emergent property of life where evolvability and limited resources are constraining factors.
Any change over time that somebody does not like.
complex mechanisms that are unable to cope with the sustained onslaught of external as well as internal assaults, giving way to exponentially reproducing failures
The progression experienced in the biological life of an organism. One of increasing simplification and specialization of genetic expression brought about mainly by the impact of environmental factors which leads to the physical death of the organism.
Posted 19 April 2005 - 02:23 PM
Posted 19 April 2005 - 04:04 PM
Posted 20 April 2005 - 01:29 AM
even in the absence of a reduction in repair, damage would accumulate
a drop in repair rates implies damage to the repair system
Methinks that a system which can maintain the repair capacity of youth indefinitely would still "age" and die
Posted 20 April 2005 - 03:08 PM
How do you reconcile this in the broader context of germline, cancer and laboratory-induced cell immortalization? Even a single cell without dividing can, theoretically, stay alive indefinitely if its endogenously deleterious metabolic processes are suitably counter-weighed by repair and disposal (autophagy).
I have yet to see any evidence to support the latter - that damage exists for which a strategy to repair has not evolved
there is no evidence to support that youthful repair rates are insufficient to sustain life (i.e. compare the damage accumulation in the cells of individuals between the ages of 10-20 versus 50-60)
So why do you think this?
Posted 20 April 2005 - 04:10 PM
Right, but with hundreds of trillions of cells, statistics is our enemy. Only one has to go down the path to cancer to kill us. Given 50,000-100,000 DNA mutation/epimutation/damage events per day, we're talking about roughly 10^21 events per year that our bodies have to deal with. Frankly, I'm impressed that cancer is kept in check as well as it is, but it doesn't take a biologist to figure out that something can go wrong without "perfect" repair systems, and there simply hasn't been enough of a selective pressure to evolve perfect repair systems. You yourself hold such as a tenet of evolvability.Even a single cell without dividing can, theoretically, stay alive indefinitely if its endogenously deleterious metabolic processes are suitably counter-weighed by repair and disposal (autophagy).
(my emphasis, italicized portion quoted below by osiris)You suggest that either
a) repair systems are not in sufficient abundance even during youth, or,
b) they do not functionally cover the whole spectrum of metabolically induced damage.
I have yet to see any evidence to support the latter - that damage exists for which a strategy to repair has not evolved - and whilst there is much evidence to support that repair systems enter into an age-related functional decline, there is no evidence to support that youthful repair rates are insufficient to sustain life (i.e. compare the damage accumulation in the cells of individuals between the ages of 10-20 versus 50-60)
Indeed, I feel this may be the case with certain types of mtDNA damage. Clonal expansion of a single mutation or deletion in mtDNA would take a minimum of 15-20 mitochondrial turnover cycles, and that's assuming that it had a 100% selection advantage. Assuming a more reasonable 20%, it may take 75-100 cycles. At 2-3 months per cycle, this means a single mtDNA mutation or deletion would take about 15-25 years to expand. With only a 10% advantage, it could take 30-50 years. So perhaps the reason that such damage accumulates measurably only in middle age isn't a sign that middle age is when repair is relaxed, but simply a sign that that's how long it takes the damage to be accumulate to a measurable level.I have yet to see any evidence to support the latter - that damage exists for which a strategy to repair has not evolved
mtDNA and nuclear DNA damage inevitibly accumulate as I explained in my paper. Secondary metabolic end points can take a great many forms, while some damage is specific and can be specifically repaired, much is not. There is no reason to suspect that we have evolved the ability to repair all of it (since much of it is on pathalogical only at ages which our species did not live to until recently).
Posted 20 April 2005 - 04:17 PM
A single cell not-dividing and and not-aging? I've never heard of such a cell.
Nuclear mutations are a part of aging, hence cancer and otherwise 'immortal' cells are clearly aging.
One word: accumulation
A great deal of damage does accumulate with age, you propose that this isentirely due to gene regulation. While that is not a theoretically impossible scenerio (if it were impossible then there wouldn't be much hope of reengineering our bodies to be able to break all secondary MEPs), I find the probability of it to be true neglidgable.
while some damage is specific and can be specifically repaired, much is not
mtDNA and nuclear DNA damage inevitibly accumulate
Posted 20 April 2005 - 04:26 PM
Time to split hairs. Yes, I do firmly believe that increased repair rates can lengthen lifespan, perhaps significantly. However, the repair rates we seek may not have been available, even at age 10. Hence, while you say that "there is no evidence to support that youthful repair rates, if maintained, are insufficient to prevent senescence", I'm doubtful that there's much evidence that such rates would be sufficient! And you can't rely on saying that a 10-year-old has virtually no pathology, and a 50-year-old does, because both repair rates and accumulation levels are variables to consider, and both have different values at age 10 or 50. Correlation, but no proof of causation, or at least, no proof that one or the other is the primary cause.This statement does not mean anything. In progeroid syndromes accumulation occurs more rapidly because of insufficient repair. It follows that increased repair would reduce accumulation. It is possible that a sufficiently high rate of repair would make accumulation negligible. I repeat: there is no evidence to support that youthful repair rates, if maintained, are insufficient to prevent senescence.
Posted 20 April 2005 - 04:34 PM
You have a dozen or so genes that need to be (epi-)mutated, and these mutations happen at a fairly regular rate throughout life.
Posted 20 April 2005 - 04:36 PM
(my emphasis)Increase DNA repair and you prevent DNA damage accumulation. Prevent methylation from shutting down gene expression and proteins continue to be expressed normally. Maintain a high turnover of mitochondria and it ensures that zombie mitochondria do not proliferate. Ensure that lysosomal function is maintained and deleterious materials are degraded. Those that cannot be degraded can be ejected from the cell by exocytosis. Each and every age-related intracellular physiological phenomenon that becomes discovered has a solution (at least in a theoretical sense until experimentally proven). Consequently if the cell has the ability to deal with such damage, the question we must be asking is why does it not, or more importantly, why has it evolved so it allows damage to accumulate?
Posted 20 April 2005 - 04:40 PM
And you can't rely on saying that a 10-year-old has virtually no pathology, and a 50-year-old does, because both repair rates and accumulation levels are variables to consider, and both have different values at age 10 or 50. Correlation, but no proof of causation, or at least, no proof that one or the other is the primary cause.
Posted 20 April 2005 - 04:42 PM
I said "fairly regular". Not exactly regular, but fairly regular. A number that comes to mind is that the rate of 8oxodG/dG is only about three times higher in old age, compared to youth, and the accumulation of actual point mutations is only about twice is high. I'll have to dig for the numbers though, and get back to you.Let me get this straight - you're suggesting that the rate of mutation/DNA damage that goes unrepaired remains constant throughout lifespan? Because if you are, I would dearly like to see the evidence.You have a dozen or so genes that need to be (epi-)mutated, and these mutations happen at a fairly regular rate throughout life.
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