Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Aging, longevity, and the role of environmental stressors: a focus on wildfire smoke and air quality

David Scieszka, Alicia M. Bolt, Mark A. McCormick, Jonathan L. Brigman, Matthew J. Campen

Frontiers in Toxicology · 2023 · ▲ 11 citations

Abstract

Aging is a complex biological process involving multiple interacting mechanisms and is being increasingly linked to environmental exposures such as wildfire smoke. In this review, we detail the telomere(definition) attrition, cellular senescence(definition))." style="text-decoration:underline dotted; text-underline-offset:2px; cursor:help;">hallmarks of aging(definition), emphasizing the role of telomere attrition, cellular senescence, epigenetic alterations, proteostasis(definition), genomic instability, and mitochondrial dysfunction(definition), while also exploring integrative hallmarks - altered intercellular communication and stem cell exhaustion. Within each hallmark of aging, our review explores how environmental disasters like wildfires, and their resultant inhaled toxicants, interact with these aging mechanisms. The intersection between aging and environmental exposures, especially high-concentration insults from wildfires, remains under-studied. Preliminary evidence, from our group and others, suggests that inhaled wildfire smoke can accelerate markers of neurological aging and reduce learning capabilities. This is likely mediated by the augmentation of circulatory factors that compromise vascular and blood-brain barrier integrity, induce chronic neuroinflammation, and promote age-associated proteinopathy-related outcomes. Moreover, wildfire smoke may induce a reduced metabolic, senescent cellular phenotype. Future interventions could potentially leverage combined anti-inflammatory and NAD + boosting compounds to counter these effects. This review underscores the critical need to study the intricate interplay between environmental factors and the biological mechanisms of aging to pave the way for effective interventions.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.3389/ftox.2023.1267667
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-08 MST

Cite this

APA
Scieszka, D., Bolt, A.M., McCormick, M.A., Brigman, J.L., &amp; Campen, M.J. (2023). Aging, longevity, and the role of environmental stressors: a focus on wildfire smoke and air quality. <em>Frontiers in Toxicology</em>. https://doi.org/10.3389/ftox.2023.1267667
Vancouver
Scieszka D, Bolt AM, McCormick MA, Brigman JL, Campen MJ. Aging, longevity, and the role of environmental stressors: a focus on wildfire smoke and air quality. Frontiers in Toxicology. 2023. doi:10.3389/ftox.2023.1267667.
BibTeX
@article{david2023Agingl, title = {Aging, longevity, and the role of environmental stressors: a focus on wildfire smoke and air quality}, author = {David Scieszka and Alicia M. Bolt and Mark A. McCormick and Jonathan L. Brigman and Matthew J. Campen}, journal = {Frontiers in Toxicology}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.3389/ftox.2023.1267667}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings