Citation only
via Europe PMC
Pathogens accelerate features of human aging: A review of molecular mechanisms.
Ageing research reviews · 2025
Epigenetic alterations
Deregulated nutrient-sensing
Mitochondrial dysfunction
Cellular senescence
Altered intercellular communication
Rapamycin / mTOR inhibition
Metformin
Human
Review
Abstract
Many models of aging assume that processes such as cellular senescence(definition) or epigenetic alteration occur under sterile conditions. However, humans sustain infection with viral, bacterial, fungal, and parasite pathogens across the course of a lifetime, many of which are capable of long-term persistence in host tissue and nerves. These pathogens-especially members of the human virome like herpesviruses, as well as intracellular bacteria and parasites-express proteins and metabolites capable of interfering with host immune signaling, mitochondrial function, gene expression, and the epigenetic environment. This paper reviews these and other key mechanisms by which infectious agents can accelerate features of human aging. This includes hijacking of host mitochondria to gain replication substrates, or the expression of proteins that distort the signaling of host longevity-regulating pathways. We further delineate mechanisms by which pathogen activity contributes to age-related disease development: for example, Alzheimer's amyloid-β plaque can act as an antimicrobial peptide that forms in response to infection. Overall, because many pathogens dysregulate mTOR(definition), AMPK, or related immunometabolic signaling, healthspan(definition) interventions such as low-dose rapamycin(definition), metformin, glutathione, and NAD+ may exert part of their effect by controlling persistent infection. The lack of diagnostics capable of detecting tissue-resident pathogen activity remains a critical bottleneck. Emerging tools-such as ultrasensitive protein assays, cfRNA metagenomics, and immune repertoire profiling-may enable integration of pathogen detection into biological age tracking. Incorporating infection into aging models is essential to more accurately characterize drivers of senescence and to optimize therapeutic strategies that target both host and microbial contributors to aging.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- Europe PMC
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.arr.2025.102865
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-05-31 MST
Cite this
APA
AD, P., & MB., V. (2025). Pathogens accelerate features of human aging: A review of molecular mechanisms. <em>Ageing research reviews</em>. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arr.2025.102865
Vancouver
AD P, MB. V. Pathogens accelerate features of human aging: A review of molecular mechanisms. Ageing research reviews. 2025. doi:10.1016/j.arr.2025.102865.
BibTeX
@article{proal2025Pathog,
title = {Pathogens accelerate features of human aging: A review of molecular mechanisms.},
author = {Proal AD and VanElzakker MB.},
journal = {Ageing research reviews},
year = {2025},
doi = {10.1016/j.arr.2025.102865},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Journal of oral microbiology 2025
Open access · OA
The oral microbiome in aging: a window into health and longevity.
Cells 2021
Open access · CC-BY
Hallmarks of Aging in Macrophages: Consequences to Skin Inflammaging
Frontiers in pharmacology 2025
Open access · OA
Epigenetic pharmacology in aging: from mechanisms to therapies for age-related disorders.
Cell Communication and Signaling 2025
Open access · CC-BY
Mitochondrial dysfunction in the regulation of aging and aging-related diseases
The Journal of Cell Biology 2017
Open access · OA
Senescence and aging: Causes, consequences, and therapeutic avenues
Geriatrics and gerontology international/Geriatrics & gerontology international 2010
Open access · OA