Ageing Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 groups that the 9 cellular hallmarks of ageing can be grouped into?

A

Primary hallmarks - cause of damage (-ve)
Antagonistic hallmarks - response to damage (+/-ve)
Integrative hallmarks - link to phenotype of ageing (physiological changes)

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2
Q

What are the 9 cellular hallmarks of ageing?

A

1) Genomic instability
2) Telomere attrition
3) Epigenetic alteration
4) Loss of proteostasis
5) Mitochondrial dysfunction
6) Deregulated nutrient sensing
7) Cellular senescence
8) Stem cell exhaustion
9) Altered communication

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3
Q

What is genomic instability?

A

Increased tendency to acquire hereditable genetic alterations that may influence normal function of a cell:
exogenous (UV) or endogenous damage (ROS)

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4
Q

What is telomere wearing?

A

Result of replication dependent shortening of telomeres that protect the ends of chromosomes from decay and fusion. This leads to genome instability

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5
Q

What is cellular senescence?

A

Permanent proliferative arrest (cell cycle arrest) on cells in response to various stressors, leading to formation of senescent cells with specific phenotypic characteristics

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6
Q

What is the purpose of cellular senescence?

A

prevention of progress of damaged cells - trigger removal
With age - exhausted regenerative capacity
Senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP): proinflammatory cytokines and MMPs

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7
Q

What is stem and progenitor cells exhaustion?

A

Inability of stem cells or progenitor cells to replenish the tissue of an organisms

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8
Q

What can cause stem cell exhaustion?

A
  1. decline in the ability of stem cells to proliferate

2. excessive proliferation, leading to stem cell exhaustion and premature ageing

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9
Q

What is the effect of ageing on bones?

A

Dec density, thickness and strength
Dec bone remodelling
Inc adipocyte formation in bone marrow
Dec vit absorption (e.g. vit D)

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10
Q

What is the effect of ageing on joints?

A

Red cartilage thickness
Excessive collagen cross-linking, leading to inc stiffness and brittleness
Impaired ability of chondrocytes to maintain the surrounding ECM

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11
Q

What is the effect of ageing on muscles?

A

Atrophy of fat free muscle mass
Red muscle strength
Loss of type II fibres
redistribution of fat depots

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12
Q

What is the effect of ageing on the CNS?

A

Decline in brain mass and weight
Fewer synaptic contacts and nerve cells
Reduce cerebral blood flow
Altered neurotransmitters

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13
Q

What is the effect of ageing on the PNS?

A
Decrease spinal motor neurons
Axon atrophy 
Nerve conduction slows 
Reduced vibratory sensation 
Reduced thermal sensitivity 
Loss of myelinated and unmyelinated nerve fibers
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14
Q

What is the effect of ageing on the CVS?

A

Thickening and stiffening of large arteries - inc systolic + dec diastolic BP
LV hypertrophy
Red sensitivity to sympathetic stimuli
Red maximal O2 uptake

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