4.6 Review

EVOLUTIONARILY CONSERVED TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS AS REGULATORS OF LONGEVITY AND TARGETS FOR GEROPROTECTION

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 102, Issue 3, Pages 1449-1494

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00017.2021

Keywords

aging; drug discovery; geroprotection; metabolism; transcription

Categories

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [SNF 31003A_156031, 31003A_ 176127, 310030_204511]
  2. European Union [633589]
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_176127, 31003A_156031, 310030_204511] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Aging is a significant risk factor for various diseases, and transcription factors have emerged as important regulators of longevity and age-related disorders, providing potential targets for interventions to mitigate the effects of aging.
Aging is the single largest risk factor for many debilitating conditions, including heart diseases, stroke, cancer, diabetes, and neurodegenerative disorders. Although far from understood in its full complexity, it is scientifically well established that aging is influenced by genetic and environmental factors and can be modulated by various interventions. One of aging's early hallmarks is aberrations in transcriptional networks, controlling for example metabolic homeostasis or the response to stress. Evidence in different model organisms abounds that a number of evolutionarily conserved transcription factors, which control such networks, can affect life span and health span across species. These transcription factors thus potentially represent conserved regulators of longevity and are emerging as important targets in the challenging quest to develop treatments to mitigate age-related diseases, and possibly even to slow aging itself. This review provides an overview of evolutionarily conserved transcription factors that impact longevity or age-related diseases in at least one multicellular model organism (nematodes, flies, or mice) and/or are tentatively linked to human aging. Discussed is the general evidence for transcriptional regulation of aging and disease, followed by a more detailed look at selected transcription factor families, the common metabolic pathways involved, and the targeting of transcription factors as a strategy for geroprotective interventions.

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