Abstract: The longstanding debate about whether aging may have evolved for some adaptive reason is generally considered to pit evolutionary theory against empirical observations consistent with aging as a programmed aspect of organismal biology, in particular conserved aging genes. Here I argue that the empirical evidence on aging mechanisms does not support a view of aging as a programmed phenomenon, but rather supports a view of aging as the dysregulation of complex networks that maintain organismal homeostasis. The appearance of programming is due largely to the inadvertent activation of existing pathways during the process of dysregulation. It is argued that aging differs markedly from known programmed biological phenomena such as apopt...
Substantial and growing empirical evidence suggests that senescence in mammals is genetically progra...
Fifty years ago, Peter Medawar and George Williams developed two now-classic theories for the evolut...
Despite tremendous progress in recent years, our understanding of the evolution of ageing is still i...
Diverse and robust experimental evidence points to an adaptive origin for aging [1, 2]. For example:...
Understanding the proximate and ultimate causes of ageing is one of the key challenges in current bi...
The overall goal of this chapter is to review present knowledge of the biological processes that gov...
Abstract Between the 1930s and 50s, evolutionary biologists developed a successful theory of why org...
Ageing as a biological process is ubiquitous in life. In humans, ageing and its related conditions a...
Understanding why and how senescence evolved is of great importance in investigating the multiple, c...
Theories of lifespan evolution are a source of confusion amongst aging researchers. After a century ...
It is generally believed that the first organisms did not age, and that aging thus evolved at some p...
Aging is an evolutionary paradox. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain it, but none full...
Between the 1930s and 50s, evolutionary biologists developed a successful theory of why organisms ag...
Understanding why we age is a long-lived open problem in evolutionary biology. Aging is prejudicial ...
Between the 1930s and 50s, evolutionary biologists developed a successful theory of why organisms a...
Substantial and growing empirical evidence suggests that senescence in mammals is genetically progra...
Fifty years ago, Peter Medawar and George Williams developed two now-classic theories for the evolut...
Despite tremendous progress in recent years, our understanding of the evolution of ageing is still i...
Diverse and robust experimental evidence points to an adaptive origin for aging [1, 2]. For example:...
Understanding the proximate and ultimate causes of ageing is one of the key challenges in current bi...
The overall goal of this chapter is to review present knowledge of the biological processes that gov...
Abstract Between the 1930s and 50s, evolutionary biologists developed a successful theory of why org...
Ageing as a biological process is ubiquitous in life. In humans, ageing and its related conditions a...
Understanding why and how senescence evolved is of great importance in investigating the multiple, c...
Theories of lifespan evolution are a source of confusion amongst aging researchers. After a century ...
It is generally believed that the first organisms did not age, and that aging thus evolved at some p...
Aging is an evolutionary paradox. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain it, but none full...
Between the 1930s and 50s, evolutionary biologists developed a successful theory of why organisms ag...
Understanding why we age is a long-lived open problem in evolutionary biology. Aging is prejudicial ...
Between the 1930s and 50s, evolutionary biologists developed a successful theory of why organisms a...
Substantial and growing empirical evidence suggests that senescence in mammals is genetically progra...
Fifty years ago, Peter Medawar and George Williams developed two now-classic theories for the evolut...
Despite tremendous progress in recent years, our understanding of the evolution of ageing is still i...