The Bidirectional Relationship Between the Burden of Cellular Senescence and Immune Aging (opens in new tab)
A cell becomes senescent given sufficient stress, molecular damage, or on reaching the Hayflick limit on replication. A senescent cell ceases replication, grows in size, and secretes a potent mix of pro-growth, pro-inflammatory signals. In a young individual, senescent cells are rapidly removed by the immune system, but this clearance slows with age. Senescent cells accumulate as a result in tissues throughout the aging body. The greater the number of senescent cells, the more disruptive thei...
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