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Title

Dog Aging: A Comprehensive Review of Molecular, Cellular, and Physiological Processes.

Authors

Guelfi, Gabriella; Capaccia, Camilla; Tedeschi, Martina; Bufalari, Antonello; Leonardi, Leonardo; Cenci-Goga, Beniamino; Maranesi, Margherita

Abstract

The aging process is a multifactorial biological phenomenon starting at birth and persisting throughout life, characterized by a decline in physiological functions and adaptability. This decline results in the diminished capacity of aging organisms to respond to environmental changes and stressors, leading to reduced efficiency in metabolic, immune, and hormonal functions. As behavioral flexibility wanes, older individuals face longer recovery times and increased vulnerability to diseases. While early research proposed nine core hallmarks of mammalian aging, recent studies have expanded this framework to twelve key characteristics: epigenetic changes, genomic instability, telomere shortening, loss of proteostasis, altered metabolism, mitochondrial dysfunction, cellular senescence, disrupted intercellular communication, stem cell depletion, immune system dysfunction, accumulation of toxic metabolites, and dysbiosis. Given the growing interest in the aging area, we propose to add a new hallmark: impaired water homeostasis. This potential hallmark could play a critical role in aging processes and might open new directions for future research in the field. This review enhances our understanding of the physiological aspects of aging in dogs, suggesting new clinical intervention strategies to prevent and control issues that may arise from the pathological degeneration of these hallmarks.

Subjects

PHENOMENOLOGICAL biology; OLDER people; CELLULAR aging; AGE; CELL communication; TELOMERES

Publication

Cells (2073-4409), 2024, Vol 13, Issue 24, p2101

ISSN

2073-4409

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.3390/cells13242101

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