Lipofuscin and Aging: A Matter of Toxic Waste

2005; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Volume: 2005; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1126/sageke.2005.5.re1

ISSN

1539-6150

Autores

Douglas A. Gray, John Woulfe,

Tópico(s)

Genetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms

Resumo

Lipofuscin is membrane-bound cellular waste that can be neither degraded nor ejected from the cell but can only be diluted through cell division and subsequent growth. The fate of postmitotic cells is to accumulate lipofuscin, which as an "aging pigment" has been considered a reliable biomarker for the age of cells such as neurons and, by extension, their hosts. In the aging human brain, deposits of lipofuscin are not uniformly distributed but are concentrated in specific regions of functional interest. The prevailing thought is that the major source of lipofuscin is incomplete lysosomal degradation of damaged mitochondria. Accumulating evidence suggests that lipofuscin is not benign but can impair the functioning of seemingly unrelated cellular systems, including the ubiquitin/proteasome pathway. A damaging feedback loop of lysosomal and proteasomal inhibition may occur as lipofuscin accumulates, leading to what has been appropriately named a "garbage catastrophe." Reversing this catastrophe presents a formidable challenge.

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