Reactive Oxygen Species and Age‐Related Genes p66Shc, Sirtuin, FoxO3 and Klotho in Senescence
Author(s) -
Igor B. Afanasʹev
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
oxidative medicine and cellular longevity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.494
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1942-0900
pISSN - 1942-0994
DOI - 10.4161/oxim.3.2.11050
Subject(s) - klotho , senescence , reactive oxygen species , sirtuin , foxo3 , gene , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , downregulation and upregulation , kidney , acetylation
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) superoxide and hydrogen peroxide perform important signaling functions in many physiological and pathophysiological processes. Cell senescence and organismal age are not exemptions.Aging-regulating genes p66shc, Sirtuin, FOXO3a and Klotho are new important factors which are stimulated by ROS signaling. It has been shown that ROS participate in initiation and prolongation of gene-dependent aging development.ROS also participate in the activation of protein kinases Akt/PKB and extracellular signal-regulated kinase ERK, which by themselves or through gene activation stimulates or retards cell senescence.Different retarding/stimulating effects of ROS might depend on the nature of signaling species-superoxide or hydrogen peroxide. Importance of radical anion superoxide as a signaling molecule with"super-nucleophilic" properties points to the possibility of the use of superoxide scavengers (SOD mimetics, ubiquinones and flavonoids) for retarding the development of aging.
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