Aging and Regeneration
A special issue of Cells (ISSN 2073-4409). This special issue belongs to the section "Cellular Aging".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 July 2019) | Viewed by 79631
Special Issue Editors
Interests: regulation of gene expression; development; organogenesis; cellular and organismic aging
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: epigenetics; long-noncoding RNA; transcription, nucleolus; aging; stem cells
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Aging is accompanied by a continuous decline in the capacity to maintain organ homeostasis and regeneration. This progressive failure to preserve organ functionality affects the quality of life and leads to an increased risk for diseases like cardiovascular disease, kidney failure, cancer, as well as to the loss of muscle mass and neurodegeneration. Many molecular and cellular pathways that are causally linked to the decline in tissue homeostasis and regenerative capacity have been identified. These mechanisms include impaired signaling, aberrant epigenetic regulation, perturbed protein quality control, and chronic oxidative stress, to name but a few. Clearly, cell-intrinsic as well as cell-extrinsic cues are involved in driving the aging process. At the organismal level, the maintenance and surveillance of organs and tissues depend to a great extent on specialized cell compartments. Adult stem cells are essential to replenish differentiated cells that get lost by common "wear and tear" but also to mediate repair after tissue lesions. Cells of the immune system are pivotal to protect against external insults and to clear compromised tissue cells. In this Special Issue, we will bring together the latest insights into the cellular and systemic mechanisms of aging and regeneration. A focus will be on mechanisms that underlie aging-associated changes in regenerative capacity. We will, however, cover a wide array of topics, including, but not limited to, aging-associated changes of the epigenome, cellular surveillance of protein homeostasis, damage response, cellular senescence, stem cell function and tissue regeneration, aging of the immune system, links between metabolism and aging, and aging-associated diseases.
Prof. Dr. Christoph Englert
Dr. Holger Bierhoff
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- aging
- tissue homeostasis
- regeneration
- adult stem cells
- protein quality control
- cell surveillance and repair
- gene regulation
- epigenetics
- metabolism
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