Litcius/Paper detail

Podocyte Aging: Why and How Getting Old Matters

Stuart J. Shankland, Yuliang Wang, Andrey S. Shaw, Joshua C. Vaughan, Jeffrey W. Pippin, Oliver Wessely

2021Journal of the American Society of Nephrology53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The effects of healthy aging on the kidney, and how these effects intersect with superimposed diseases, are highly relevant in the context of the population's increasing longevity. Age-associated changes to podocytes, which are terminally differentiated glomerular epithelial cells, adversely affect kidney health. This review discusses the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying podocyte aging, how these mechanisms might be augmented by disease in the aged kidney, and approaches to mitigate progressive damage to podocytes. Furthermore, we address how biologic pathways such as those associated with cellular growth confound aging in humans and rodents.

Topics & Concepts

PodocyteContext (archaeology)DiseaseKidney diseaseCellular AgingMedicineGlomerulosclerosisBiologyKidney GlomerulusKidneyRenal glomerulusAffect (linguistics)Cell biologyRapidly progressive glomerulonephritisKidney developmentCancer researchMolecular cell biologySlit diaphragmSignal transductionCellular senescenceCell growthBioinformaticsGlomerulonephritisNeuroscienceRenal Diseases and GlomerulopathiesChronic Kidney Disease and DiabetesBirth, Development, and Health