4.2 Review

Is Human Aging a Form of Phenoptosis?

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY-MOSCOW
Volume 87, Issue 12-13, Pages 1446-1464

Publisher

MAIK NAUKA/INTERPERIODICA/SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1134/S0006297922120033

Keywords

phenoptosis; aging; subtelomere; telomere; subtelomere-telomere theory; gradual cell senescence; cell senescence; epigenetic changes

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The article discusses whether aging is a result of degenerative factors accumulating due to insufficient opposition from natural selection or an ordered, genetically determined, and regulated process. More evidence supports the thesis that aging is a form of phenoptosis. However, further research is needed to support the opposite thesis and clarify the meaning of phenomena that seem to invalidate the phenoptosis hypothesis.
A much debated question is whether aging is the cumulative consequence of degenerative factors insufficiently opposed by natural selection, or, on the contrary, an ordered process, genetically determined and regulated, modeled by natural selection, and for which the definition of phenoptotic phenomenon would be entirely appropriate. In this review, theoretical arguments and empirical data about the two hypotheses are exposed, with more evidence in support of the thesis of aging as a form of phenoptosis. However, as the thesis of aging as an adaptive and programmed phenomenon necessarily requires the existence of specific mechanisms that determine to age, such as the subtelomere-telomere theory proposed for this purpose, the evidence supporting the mechanisms described by this theory is reported. In particular, it is highlighted that the recent interpretation of the role of TERRA sequences in the context of subtelomere-telomere theory is a fundamental point in supporting the hypothesized mechanisms. Furthermore, some characteristics of the mechanisms proposed by the theory, such as epigenetic modifications in aging, gradual cell senescence, cell senescence, limits in cell duplications, and fixed size of the telomeric heterochromatin hood, are exposed in their compatibility with both the thesis of aging as phenoptotic phenomenon and the opposite thesis. In short, aging as a form of phenoptosis appears a scientifically sound hypothesis while the opposite thesis should clarify the meaning of various phenomena that appear to invalidate it.

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