Cell Kinetic Approaches to the Search for Anti-Aging Drugs: Thirty Years After


Cite item

Full Text

Open Access Open Access
Restricted Access Access granted
Restricted Access Subscription Access

Abstract

This is a brief overview of the ideas of the possibility of using the cell kinetic model developed by the author in the 1980s to test, in experiments on cell cultures, potential geroprotectors and geropromoters that slow down or accelerate, respectively, the aging process in animals and humans. The history of the evolution of this model—from estimation of only the cell reproduction rate and saturation density in a non-subcultured cell culture to constructing survival curves in the stationary phase of growth and to a further analysis of the possible interrelation between all parts of the curve of cells’ growth and subsequent dying out—is considered. Possible approaches to mathematical and statistical analysis of the data obtained within the framework of this model system are analyzed. It is emphasized that such studies can be carried out on cells of a very different nature (normal and transformed human and animal cells, plant cells, yeast, mycoplasmas, bacteria, etc.), which makes possible an evolutionary approach to the interpretation of the results obtained. At the same time, in the author’s opinion, the most promising experiments are those carried out on immortalized cells of humans and animals, since they are not cancerous on the one hand and have an unlimited mitotic potential on the other hand and, therefore, do not “age” in the process of numerous divisions, as, for example, normal human diploid fibroblasts do. It is assumed that the appropriate mathematical analysis of the entire growth and dying out curve of a non-subcultured cell culture (from seeding into a culture flask to the complete death of all cells) may allow the clarification of certain relationships between the development and aging of a multicellular organism and to increase the reliability of identifying promising geroprotectors.

About the authors

A. N. Khokhlov

Evolutionary Cytogerontology Sector, School of Biology

Author for correspondence.
Email: khokhlov@mail.bio.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119234

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

Copyright (c) 2018 Allerton Press, Inc.