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Do DNA Double-Strand Breaks Drive Aging?

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 63, Issue 5, Pages 729-738

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2016.08.004

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [AG017242, AG047200, CA180126]
  2. Glenn Foundation

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DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are rare, but highly toxic, lesions requiring orchestrated and conserved machinery to prevent adverse consequences, such as cell death and cancer-causing genome structural mutations. DSBs trigger the DNA damage response (DDR) that directs a cell to repair the break, undergo apoptosis, or become senescent. There is increasing evidence that the various endpoints of DSB processing by different cells and tissues are part of the aging phenotype, with each stage of the DDR associated with specific aging pathologies. In this Perspective, we discuss the possibility that DSBs are major drivers of intrinsic aging, highlighting the dynamics of spontaneous DSBs in relation to aging, the distinct age-related pathologies induced by DSBs, and the segmental progeroid phenotypes in humans and mice with genetic defects in DSB repair. A model is presented as to how DSBs could drive some of the basic mechanisms underlying age-related functional decline and death.

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