AbstractBackground: Limited replicative capacity is a defining characteristic of most normal human cells and culminates in senescence, an arrested state in which cells remain viable but display an altered pattern of gene and protein expression. To survey widely the alterations in gene expression, we have developed a DNA microarray analysis system that contains genes previously reported to be involved in aging, as well as those involved in many of the major biochemical signaling pathways.Results: Senescence-associated gene expression was assessed in three cell types: dermal fibroblasts, retinal pigment epithelial cells, and vascular endothelial cells. Fibroblasts demonstrated a strong inflammatory-type response, but shared limited overlap in...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
AbstractBackground: Limited replicative capacity is a defining characteristic of most normal human c...
Unlike immortalized cell lines, normal human fibroblasts in culture undergo replicative senescence i...
Replicative senescence is of fundamental importance for the process of cellular aging, since it is a...
BACKGROUND: Cellular senescence, a permanent state of replicative arrest in otherwise proliferating ...
<div><p>Cellular senescence is a cell cycle arrest accompanied by high expression of cyclin dependen...
Senescent cells play important roles in both physiological and pathological processes, including can...
Senescence is a highly regulated process that limits cellular replication by enforcing a G1 arrest i...
Senescence is a highly regulated process that limits cellular replication by enforcing a G1 arrest i...
Replicative senescence is the state of irreversible proliferative arrest that occurs as a concomitan...
BACKGROUND: Cellular senescence is induced either internally, for example by replication exhaustion ...
BACKGROUND: Cellular senescence is induced either internally, for example by replication exhaustion ...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
AbstractBackground: Limited replicative capacity is a defining characteristic of most normal human c...
Unlike immortalized cell lines, normal human fibroblasts in culture undergo replicative senescence i...
Replicative senescence is of fundamental importance for the process of cellular aging, since it is a...
BACKGROUND: Cellular senescence, a permanent state of replicative arrest in otherwise proliferating ...
<div><p>Cellular senescence is a cell cycle arrest accompanied by high expression of cyclin dependen...
Senescent cells play important roles in both physiological and pathological processes, including can...
Senescence is a highly regulated process that limits cellular replication by enforcing a G1 arrest i...
Senescence is a highly regulated process that limits cellular replication by enforcing a G1 arrest i...
Replicative senescence is the state of irreversible proliferative arrest that occurs as a concomitan...
BACKGROUND: Cellular senescence is induced either internally, for example by replication exhaustion ...
BACKGROUND: Cellular senescence is induced either internally, for example by replication exhaustion ...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...
Normal somatic cells invariably enter a state of irreversibly arrested growth and altered function a...