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An Immunological Distinction between Senescence linked Secretory Phenotypes: SASP vs. Midas. Dr. Dan Guerra. Authentic Biochemistry 16 Jan 2021

Author
Dr Daniel J. Guerra
Published
Sun 17 Jan 2021
Episode Link
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dr-daniel-j-guerra/episodes/An-Immunological-Distinction-between-Senescence-linked-Secretory-Phenotypes-SASP-vs--Midas--Dr--Dan-Guerra--Authentic-Biochemistry-16-Jan-2021-ep2lj7

Non-uniform ageing is a major associative risk factor for cancer and degenerative diseases and mitochondrial dysfunction is linked to cellular senescence in association with cell cycle arrest, telomerase decline and nucleic acid/lipid/protein oxidation. Indeed, mitochondrial dysfunction comprises a distinct type of cellular senescence; mitochondrial SIRT3 or SIRT5, can induce Mitochondrial Dysfunction Associated-Senescence (MiDAS)


Senescence is a chronological and pathophysiological sequenced event response that restricts mitotic division and thus aberrant proliferation of damaged, infected and/or tumor inducing cells. Because these cells are senescent and exhibit low anabolic currency to present self-produced antigen epitopes as displayed by HLA, they are not targeted by immune responses but rather, may become secretory and induce inflammation by instantiating the Senescence Associated Secretory Phenotype-SASP. Senescence presents with metabolic reprogramming, epigenetic chromatin remodeling, and the secretion of growth factors, signaling molecules, proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, extra-cellular matrix metallo proteases, nucleotides, exosomes and ionic bursts collectively referred to as SASP.


Both SASP and MiDAS can occur in the CNS during human aging thus generating a remarkably complex-contrarion dual pathophysiological phenotype leading to neurodegeneration or more rarely, certain forms of brain cancer.




Authentic Biochemistry Podcast is produced by Daniel J. Guerra, PhD.  Today's Date: 16 January 2021


Refs.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences Volume 41 Issue 3 Pages 207-209 (March 2016)


Cell Metabolism Volume 23, Issue 2, 9 February 2016, Pages 303-314


Front. Immunol., 19 March 2018

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