Skip to content
Open access · OA via OpenAlex

Mitochondria in the spotlight of aging and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

Ana L. Mora, Marta Bueno, Mauricio Rojas

Journal of Clinical Investigation · 2017 · ▲ 227 citations

Abstract

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a chronic age-related lung disease with high mortality that is characterized by abnormal scarring of the lung parenchyma. There has been a recent attempt to define the age-associated changes predisposing individuals to develop IPF. Age-related perturbations that are increasingly found in epithelial cells and fibroblasts from IPF lungs compared with age-matched cells from normal lungs include defective autophagy(definition), telomere(definition) attrition, altered proteostasis(definition), and cell senescence(definition). These divergent processes seem to converge in mitochondrial dysfunction(definition) and metabolic distress, which potentiate maladaptation to stress and susceptibility to age-related diseases such as IPF. Therapeutic approaches that target aging processes may be beneficial for halting the progression of disease and improving quality of life in IPF patients.

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

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1172/jci87440
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-03 MST

Cite this

APA
Mora, A.L., Bueno, M., &amp; Rojas, M. (2017). Mitochondria in the spotlight of aging and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. <em>Journal of Clinical Investigation</em>. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci87440
Vancouver
Mora AL, Bueno M, Rojas M. Mitochondria in the spotlight of aging and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2017. doi:10.1172/jci87440.
BibTeX
@article{ana2017Mitoch, title = {Mitochondria in the spotlight of aging and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis}, author = {Ana L. Mora and Marta Bueno and Mauricio Rojas}, journal = {Journal of Clinical Investigation}, year = {2017}, doi = {10.1172/jci87440}, }

Research neighborhood

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

Related findings