Cell non autonomous aging describes aging effects driven by signals originating from other cells or tissues. Cells influence each other through hormones, cytokines, metabolites, and extracellular vesicles. Aging alters these signals, spreading dysfunction across tissues. Cell non autonomous aging explains how localized damage can produce systemic aging phenotypes. This concept highlights aging as a coordinated, organism-wide process rather than isolated cellular failure. Understanding cell non autonomous aging supports system-level intervention strategies that target intercellular communication.
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Title : An introduction to alchemical facial acupuncture: Sparking the shen
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Title : Decoding the secret of longevity through big data: Noncoding RNAs—not proteins—drive animal lifespan evolution
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