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Ageing, Cellular Senescence and Neurodegenerative Disease

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms19102937

Keywords

neurodegeneration; cellular senescence; ageing; Alzheimer's disease; multiple sclerosis; Parkinson's disease; lipofuscin; SenTraGor(TM) (GL13); senolytics

Funding

  1. MS Society of Great Britain and Northern Ireland [207495]
  2. Welfare Foundation for Social & Cultural Sciences (KIKPE), Greece

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Ageing is a major risk factor for developing many neurodegenerative diseases. Cellular senescence is a homeostatic biological process that has a key role in driving ageing. There is evidence that senescent cells accumulate in the nervous system with ageing and neurodegenerative disease and may predispose a person to the appearance of a neurodegenerative condition or may aggravate its course. Research into senescence has long been hindered by its variable and cell-type specific features and the lack of a universal marker to unequivocally detect senescent cells. Recent advances in senescence markers and genetically modified animal models have boosted our knowledge on the role of cellular senescence in ageing and age-related disease. The aim now is to fully elucidate its role in neurodegeneration in order to efficiently and safely exploit cellular senescence as a therapeutic target. Here, we review evidence of cellular senescence in neurons and glial cells and we discuss its putative role in Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis and we provide, for the first time, evidence of senescence in neurons and glia in multiple sclerosis, using the novel GL13 lipofuscin stain as a marker of cellular senescence.

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