Abstract
AbstractAge-related pathologies are so widely presented in old age that in most cases they are hardly distinguishable at the molecular level from the so-called ‘‘normal’’ aging. Both aging and age-related diseases are characterized by a wide range of transcriptional and epigenetic changes that underlie the physiological or pathological phenotype, with plenty of overlap in their signatures, but also with differences. In most pathological conditions it is rather the dysregulation of a complex network of genes than a problem with a single gene dysregulation that causes its emergence or progression, and aging differently gives a “predisposition” towards an age-related pathology or another, or in a favorable situation towards none. The important question is how similar are the transcriptional changes during “healthy” aging with those that occur in age-related diseases. In this study, we explore gene expression data to answer this question and aim to predict which drugs and compounds could have a reversing effect on their common drift.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory