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Senolytic drugs: from discovery to translation
James L. Kirkland, Tamar Tchkonia
Journal of Internal Medicine · 2020 · ▲ 1,109 citations
Cellular senescence
Chronic inflammation
Partial reprogramming (OSK)
Senolytics
Human
Preclinical / animal
Abstract
Senolytics(definition) are a class of drugs that selectively clear senescent cells (SC). The first senolytic drugs Dasatinib, Quercetin, Fisetin and Navitoclax were discovered using a hypothesis-driven approach. SC accumulate with ageing and at causal sites of multiple chronic disorders, including diseases accounting for the bulk of morbidity, mortality and health expenditures. The most deleterious SC are resistant to apoptosis and have up-regulation of anti-apoptotic pathways which defend SC against their own inflammatory senescence(definition)-associated secretory phenotype (SASP), allowing them to survive, despite killing neighbouring cells. Senolytics transiently disable these SCAPs, causing apoptosis of those SC with a tissue-destructive SASP. Because SC take weeks to reaccumulate, senolytics can be administered intermittently - a 'hit-and-run' approach. In preclinical models, senolytics delay, prevent or alleviate frailty, cancers and cardiovascular, neuropsychiatric, liver, kidney, musculoskeletal, lung, eye, haematological, metabolic and skin disorders as well as complications of organ transplantation, radiation and cancer treatment. As anticipated for agents targeting the fundamental ageing mechanisms that are 'root cause' contributors to multiple disorders, potential uses of senolytics are protean, potentially alleviating over 40 conditions in preclinical studies, opening a new route for treating age-related dysfunction and diseases. Early pilot trials of senolytics suggest they decrease senescent cells, reduce inflammation and alleviate frailty in humans. Clinical trials for diabetes, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, Alzheimer's disease, COVID-19, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, eye diseases and bone marrow transplant and childhood cancer survivors are underway or beginning. Until such studies are done, it is too early for senolytics to be used outside of clinical trials.
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- 10.1111/joim.13141
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- 2026-06-14 MST
Cite this
APA
Kirkland, J.L., & Tchkonia, T. (2020). Senolytic drugs: from discovery to translation. <em>Journal of Internal Medicine</em>. https://doi.org/10.1111/joim.13141
Vancouver
Kirkland JL, Tchkonia T. Senolytic drugs: from discovery to translation. Journal of Internal Medicine. 2020. doi:10.1111/joim.13141.
BibTeX
@article{james2020Senoly,
title = {Senolytic drugs: from discovery to translation},
author = {James L. Kirkland and Tamar Tchkonia},
journal = {Journal of Internal Medicine},
year = {2020},
doi = {10.1111/joim.13141},
}
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