Systems Biology and Longevity: An Emerging Approach to Identify Innovative Anti- Aging Targets and Strategies

  • Cevenini E
  • Bellavista E
  • Tieri P
  • et al.
70Citations
Citations of this article
73Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Human aging and longevity are complex and multi-factorial traits that result from a combination of environmental, genetic, epigenetic and stochastic factors, each contributing to the overall phenotype. The multi-factorial process of aging acts at different levels of complexity, from molecule to cell, from organ to organ systems and finally to organism, giving rise to the dynamic "aging mosaic". At present, an increasing amount of experimental data on genetics, genomics, proteomics and other -omics are available thanks to new high-throughput technologies but a comprehensive model for the study of human aging and longevity is still lacking. Systems biology represents a strategy to integrate and quantify the existing knowledge from different sources into predictive models, to be later tested and then implemented with new experimental data for validation and refinement in a recursive process. The ultimate goal is to compact the new acquired knowledge into a single picture, ideally able to characterize the phenotype at systemic/organism level. In this review we will briefly discuss the aging phenotype in a systems biology perspective, showing four specific examples at different levels of complexity, from a systemic process (inflammation) to a cascade-process pathways (coagulation) and from cellular organelle (proteasome) to single gene-network (PON-1), which could also represent targets for anti-aging strategies.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Cevenini, E., Bellavista, E., Tieri, P., Castellani, G., Lescai, F., Francesconi, M., … Franceschi, C. (2010). Systems Biology and Longevity: An Emerging Approach to Identify Innovative Anti- Aging Targets and Strategies. Current Pharmaceutical Design, 16(7), 802–813. https://doi.org/10.2174/138161210790883660

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free