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Review
. 2021 Jun;60(3):103162.
doi: 10.1016/j.transci.2021.103162. Epub 2021 May 21.

Attenuation of age-elevated blood factors by repositioning plasmapheresis: A novel perspective and approach

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Free article
Review

Attenuation of age-elevated blood factors by repositioning plasmapheresis: A novel perspective and approach

Melod Mehdipour et al. Transfus Apher Sci. 2021 Jun.
Free article

Abstract

Aging is associated with the impairment of stem cell activation, leading to the functional decline of tissues and increasing the risk for age-associated diseases. The old, damaged or unrepaired tissues disturb distant tissue homeostasis by secreting factors into the circulation, which may not only serve as biomarkers for specific age-associated pathologies but also induce a variety of degenerative phenotypes. In this review, we summarize and discuss systemic determinants that perpetuate age-related tissue dysfunction. We further elaborate on the effects of attenuating these circulating factors by highlighting recent advances which utilize plasmapheresis in a pre-clinical or clinical setting. Overall, we postulate that repositioning therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) to dilute the systemic factors, which become deleterious at their age-elevated levels, could be a rapidly effective rejuvenation therapy that recalibrates crucial signaling pathways to a youthful state.

Keywords: Age-associated diseases; Aging; Blood; Inflammation; Plasma; Plasmapheresis; Rejuvenation; Senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP); Senescent cells; Systemic factors; Tissue repair.

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