This chapter is intended to outline the main results of a research trend realized by the author during the last 45 years, focused on the main role played by the cell membrane in the aging process. It is a very wide field; therefore, the reader cannot expect in this limited space a detailed description, but will be given a wide, interdisciplinary insight into the main facts and theories regarding cellular aging. The central idea described here is the concept called the membrane hypothesis of aging (MHA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Gerontol Geriatr
July 2009
One of the biggest scandals of the recent history of medicine is the conflict of views between the gerontological establishment and the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine (A4M). The style used in that discussion was really rough and unusual. On the one hand, according to some representatives of the American Medical Associations (AMA), the use of human growth hormone (hGH) for anti-aging medical interventions is illegal, criminal, and requires persecution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFritz Verzár, founder and one of the most important operator of experimental gerontology, was born 120 years ago at Budapest (Hungary) and passed away in 1979 at Basel (Switzerland) at the age of 93. This short paper, as well as the following one in this issue by Robert [Robert, L., 2006.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Gerontol Geriatr
March 2004
The membrane hypothesis of aging (MHA) explains the biological waste product (lipofuscin) formation as a disbalance between the rates of protein synthesis and damage, as well as of elimination of the damaged components. Although, this concept has not been refuted on the basis of any experimental evidence, it has neither been widely accepted. During the last decade the general interest has turned toward the molecular genetics so intensely, that research aimed at clarifying cell biological mechanisms became so to say hibernated.
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