AI Article Synopsis

  • Major diseases of aging, like atherosclerosis and neurodegenerative disorders, are linked to the buildup of harmful substances in cells, which could impact cellular function and overall health.
  • The accumulation of lipofuscin is a key indicator of aging in certain cells, and reversing this buildup could help combat age-related diseases, though it's tough to achieve due to these substances' resistance to breakdown.
  • The authors propose using microbial enzymes to enhance the body’s natural breakdown processes, drawing on microbes in environments like graveyards that effectively degrade these harmful substances, and discuss strategies for isolating these microbes and their enzymes while minimizing potential side effects.

Article Abstract

Several major diseases of old age, including atherosclerosis, macular degeneration and neurodegenerative diseases are associated with the intracellular accumulation of substances that impair cellular function and viability. Moreover, the accumulation of lipofuscin, a substance that may have similarly deleterious effects, is one of the most universal markers of aging in postmitotic cells. Reversing this accumulation may thus be valuable, but has proven challenging, doubtless because substances resistant to cellular catabolism are inherently hard to degrade. We suggest a radically new approach: augmenting humans' natural catabolic machinery with microbial enzymes. Many recalcitrant organic molecules are naturally degraded in the soil. Since the soil in certain environments - graveyards, for example - is enriched in human remains but does not accumulate these substances, it presumably harbours microbes that degrade them. The enzymes responsible could be identified and engineered to metabolise these substances in vivo. Here, we survey a range of such substances, their putative roles in age-related diseases and the possible benefits of their removal. We discuss how microbes capable of degrading them can be isolated, characterised and their relevant enzymes engineered for this purpose and ways to avoid potential side-effects.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arr.2005.03.008DOI Listing

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