Litcius/Paper detail

Cellular senescence and the skeleton: pathophysiology and therapeutic implications

Sundeep Khosla, Joshua N. Farr, David G. Monroe

2022Journal of Clinical Investigation85 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cellular senescence is a fundamental aging mechanism that is currently the focus of considerable interest as a pathway that could be targeted to ameliorate aging across multiple tissues, including the skeleton. There is now substantial evidence that senescent cells accumulate in the bone microenvironment with aging and that targeting these cells prevents age-related bone loss, at least in mice. Cellular senescence also plays important roles in mediating the skeletal fragility associated with diabetes mellitus, radiation, and chemotherapy. As such, there are ongoing efforts to develop "senolytic" drugs that kill senescent cells by targeting key survival mechanisms in these cells without affecting normal cells. Because senescent cells accumulate across tissues with aging, senolytics offer the attractive possibility of treating multiple age-related comorbidities simultaneously.

Topics & Concepts

SenescenceCellular senescenceBiologyMechanism (biology)Cell biologyCellular AgingStem cellCancer researchPathophysiologyCell survivalBioinformaticsAutophagyDiabetes mellitusMedicinePhenotypeCellular modelDNA damageAgeingImmunologyCellTelomeres, Telomerase, and SenescenceBone Metabolism and DiseasesEpigenetics and DNA Methylation