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. 2016 Mar 15;7(2):111-3.
doi: 10.14336/AD.2016.0312. eCollection 2016 Mar.

Aging and Neurodegeneration: A Tangle of Models and Mechanisms

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Aging and Neurodegeneration: A Tangle of Models and Mechanisms

Sasanka Chakrabarti et al. Aging Dis. .

Abstract

The research on aging and age-related diseases, especially the neurodegenerative diseases, is on the fast track. However, the results have so far not been translated to actual benefit for the patients in terms of treatment or diagnosis of age-related degenerative diseases including those of the CNS. As far as the prevention of the cognitive decline during non-pathological aging is concerned, there is nothing much to offer other than calorie restriction and physical exercise. Needless to say, the benefits are not up to our expectations. However, over the years at the experimental level it has been possible to identify several cellular and molecular mechanisms that are intricately associated with aging in general and neurodegenerative diseases in particular. These include oxidative stress and altered redox-signaling, mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammation, proteotoxicity and altered gene expressions. These inter-dependent pathways mediate cellular senescence and often culminate in programmed cell death like apoptosis and autophagy, and in the context of brain these changes are manifested clinically as cognitive decline and pathologically as neurodegeneration. This special issue provides the readers with glimpses of this complex scenario from different angles primarily in the context of brain and also attempts to identify the potential drug targets against neurodegenerative diseases.

Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; aging; amyloid beta peptide; autophagy; mitochondrial dysfunction; oxidative stress.

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