Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
Robustness during Aging—Molecular Biological and Physiological Aspects
Emanuel Barth, Patricia Sieber, Heiko Stark, Stefan Schuster
Cells · 2020 · ▲ 17 citations
Abstract
Understanding the process of aging is still an important challenge to enable healthy aging and to prevent age-related diseases. Most studies in age research investigate the decline in organ functionality and gene activity with age. The focus on decline can even be considered a paradigm in that field. However, there are certain aspects that remain surprisingly stable and keep the organism robust. Here, we present and discuss various properties of robust behavior during human and animal aging, including physiological and molecular biological features, such as the hematocrit, body temperature, immunity against infectious diseases and others. We examine, in the context of robustness, the different theories of how aging occurs. We regard the role of aging in the light of evolution.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.3390/cells9081862
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-07-07 MST
Cite this
APA
Barth, E., Sieber, P., Stark, H., & Schuster, S. (2020). Robustness during Aging—Molecular Biological and Physiological Aspects. <em>Cells</em>. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells9081862
Vancouver
Barth E, Sieber P, Stark H, Schuster S. Robustness during Aging—Molecular Biological and Physiological Aspects. Cells. 2020. doi:10.3390/cells9081862.
BibTeX
@article{emanuel2020Robust,
title = {Robustness during Aging—Molecular Biological and Physiological Aspects},
author = {Emanuel Barth and Patricia Sieber and Heiko Stark and Stefan Schuster},
journal = {Cells},
year = {2020},
doi = {10.3390/cells9081862},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.