Reference: Jazwinski SM (2002) Growing old: metabolic control and yeast aging. Annu Rev Microbiol 56:769-92

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Abstract


The metabolic characteristics of a yeast cell determine its life span. Depending on conditions, stress resistance can have either a salutary or a deleterious effect on longevity. Gene dysregulation increases with age, and countering it increases life span. These three determinants of yeast longevity may be interrelated, and they are joined by a potential fourth, genetic stability. These factors can also operate in phylogenetically diverse species. Adult longevity seems to borrow features from the genetic programs of dormancy to provide the metabolic and stress resistance resources necessary for extended survival. Both compensatory and preventive mechanisms determine life span, while epigenetic factors and the element of chance contribute to the role that genes and environment play in aging.

Reference Type
Journal Article | Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. | Review
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Jazwinski SM
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