4.4 Article

Einstein-Nathan Shock Center: translating the hallmarks of aging to extend human health span

期刊

GEROSCIENCE
卷 43, 期 5, 页码 2167-2182

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11357-021-00428-9

关键词

Health span; Metabolism; Parabiosis; Proteostasis; Autophagy; Proteomics; Genomics

资金

  1. NIH NIA [P30AG038072]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Einstein-Nathan Shock Center aims to make scientific discoveries in geroscience, translate them towards drug discovery, and confirm their relevance to humans. Through cutting-edge research programs and unique support cores, the center integrates key hallmarks of aging and facilitates translational biological research programs. The collaborative nature of the supporting research cores forms the foundation of research success at the E-NSC, allowing for expansion in translational research and new drug design services targeting the hallmarks of aging.
The overarching mission of the Einstein-Nathan Shock Center (E-NSC) is to make scientific discoveries in geroscience, leveraging on the expertise in our center in 6 out of the 7 pillars of aging, and to translate their effects towards drug discovery. The relevance of this basic biology of aging discoveries to humans will be confirmed through the unique gero-human resource at E-NSC. This is achieved through services provided by E-NSC, connectivity among its members, attracting worldwide investigators, and providing them with the opportunities to become future leaders. The two central components of the E-NSC are (a) cutting-edge research programs and (b) unique E-NSC research support cores. E-NSC scientists lead NIH-supported cutting-edge research programs that integrate key hallmarks of aging including proteostasis/autophagy, metabolism/inflammaging, genetic/epigenetics, stem cells/regeneration, and translational aging/longevity. Since the inception of the E-NSC, the well-integrated, collaborative, and innovative nature of the multiple supporting state-of-the-art E-NSC research cores form the bedrock of research success at the E-NSC. The three state-of-the-art E-NSC research cores, (i) Proteostasis of Aging Core (PAC), (ii) the Health Span Core (HSC), and (iii) the Human Multi-Omics Core (HMOC), have allowed impressive expansion of translational biological research programs. Expansion was facilitated through the wealth of data coming from genomics/proteomics and metabolomic analysis on human longevity studies, due to access to a variety of biological samples from elderly subjects in clinical trials with aging-targeting drugs, and new drug design services via the PAC to target the hallmarks of aging.

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