Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Systemic Problems: A perspective on stem cell aging and rejuvenation

Irina M. Conboy, Michael J. Conboy, Justin Rebo

Aging · 2015 · ▲ 67 citations

Abstract

This review provides balanced analysis of the advances in systemic regulation of young and old tissue stem cells and suggests strategies for accelerating development of therapies to broadly combat age-related tissue degenerative pathologies. Many highlighted recent reports on systemic tissue rejuvenation combine parabiosis with a "silver bullet" putatively responsible for the positive effects. Attempts to unify these papers reflect the excitement about this experimental approach and add value in reproducing previous work. At the same time, defined molecular approaches, which are "beyond parabiosis" for the rejuvenation of multiple old organs represent progress toward attenuating or even reversing human tissue aging.

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

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.18632/aging.100819
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-23 MST

Cite this

APA
Conboy, I.M., Conboy, M.J., &amp; Rebo, J. (2015). Systemic Problems: A perspective on stem cell aging and rejuvenation. <em>Aging</em>. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.100819
Vancouver
Conboy IM, Conboy MJ, Rebo J. Systemic Problems: A perspective on stem cell aging and rejuvenation. Aging. 2015. doi:10.18632/aging.100819.
BibTeX
@article{irina2015System, title = {Systemic Problems: A perspective on stem cell aging and rejuvenation}, author = {Irina M. Conboy and Michael J. Conboy and Justin Rebo}, journal = {Aging}, year = {2015}, doi = {10.18632/aging.100819}, }

Research neighborhood

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

Related findings