Research Perspective Volume 5, Issue 10 pp 782—788
Aging on a different scale – chronological versus pathology-related aging
- 1 National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Center for Health Protection, Bilthoven, the Netherlands
- 2 Leiden University Medical Center, Department of Toxicogenetics, Leiden, the Netherlands
- 3 University of Amsterdam (UvA), MicroArray Department & Integrative Bioinformatics Unit (MAD-IBU), Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS), Faculty of Science (FNWI), Amsterdam, the Netherlands
- 4 Netherlands Bioinformatics Centre (NBIC), Nijmegen, the Netherlands
- 5 Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Department of Genetics, New York, USA
- 6 Erasmus University Medical Center, CGC Department of Genetics, Rotterdam, the Netherlands
Received: September 5, 2013 Accepted: October 16, 2013 Published: October 16, 2013
https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.100606How to Cite
Abstract
In the next decades the elderly population will increase dramatically, demanding appropriate solutions in health care and aging research focusing on healthy aging to prevent high burdens and costs in health care. For this, research targeting tissue-specific and individual aging is paramount to make the necessary progression in aging research. In a recently published study we have attempted to make a step interpreting aging data on chronological as well as pathological scale. For this, we sampled five major tissues at regular time intervals during the entire C57BL/6J murine lifespan from a controlled in vivo aging study, measured the whole transcriptome and incorporated temporal as well as physical health aspects into the analyses. In total, we used 18 different age-related pathological parameters and transcriptomic profiles of liver, kidney, spleen, lung and brain and created a database that can now be used for a broad systems biology approach. In our study, we focused on the dynamics of biological processes during chronological aging and the comparison between chronological and pathology-related aging.