脑老化中的选择性弹性:挑战一次性躯体理论的范围。

IF 4.1 4区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Bruno César Feltes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

一次性躯体理论(DST)认为生物体优先考虑生殖成功而不是长期的躯体维护,导致生殖后不可避免的衰退。然而,这样的基础并不能完全解释人类大脑在生殖高峰之后保持代谢成本高、可塑性强和认知基本功能的能力。这一观点通过提出大脑衰老遵循由生殖后适应压力形成的选择性弹性轨迹,挑战了DST的普遍性。与其将大脑老化描述为被动的退化,这项工作将其重新解释为系统衰退下能量和资源的主动和动态重新分配。分子和生化适应,如酮体代谢、烟酰胺腺嘌呤二核苷酸(NAD⁺)挽救、替代抗氧化防御和持续的雌激素敏感性,被认为是确保神经元功能选择性保存的综合策略。本文提供了一个修正的理论视角,强调适应性、区域优先级和整个生命周期的能源经济,挑战了DST的一些假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Selective resilience in brain aging: challenging the scope of the disposable soma theory.

The disposable soma theory (DST) posits that organisms prioritize reproductive success over long-term somatic maintenance, resulting in an inevitable decline after reproduction. However, such a basis does not fully explain the human brain's capacity to preserve metabolically costly, plastic, and cognitively essential functions well beyond the reproductive peak. This Perspective challenges the universality of DST by proposing that brain aging follows a selectively resilient trajectory, shaped by post-reproductive adaptive pressures. Rather than depicting brain aging as passive deterioration, this work reinterprets it as an active and dynamic reallocation of energy and resources under systemic decline. Molecular and biochemical adaptations, such as ketone body metabolism, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD⁺) salvage, alternative antioxidant defenses, and persistent estrogenic sensitivity, are presented as integrated strategies that ensure the selective preservation of neuronal functions. This article offers a revised theoretical lens that emphasizes adaptation, regional prioritization, and energetic economy across the lifespan, challenging some postulates of the DST.

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来源期刊
Biogerontology
Biogerontology 医学-老年医学
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
4.40%
发文量
54
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal Biogerontology offers a platform for research which aims primarily at achieving healthy old age accompanied by improved longevity. The focus is on efforts to understand, prevent, cure or minimize age-related impairments. Biogerontology provides a peer-reviewed forum for publishing original research data, new ideas and discussions on modulating the aging process by physical, chemical and biological means, including transgenic and knockout organisms; cell culture systems to develop new approaches and health care products for maintaining or recovering the lost biochemical functions; immunology, autoimmunity and infection in aging; vertebrates, invertebrates, micro-organisms and plants for experimental studies on genetic determinants of aging and longevity; biodemography and theoretical models linking aging and survival kinetics.
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