0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Food & Water Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Senescence in Pulmonary Fibrosis: Between Aging and Exposure

Frontiers in Medicine 2020 51 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alessandro Venosa

Summary

This review examines the role of cellular senescence in pulmonary fibrosis, considering both natural aging processes and environmental exposures such as air pollutants and particulates. It discusses how genomic instability, telomere shortening, and other hallmarks of senescence interact with fibrotic lung disease development in an aging global population.

To date, chronic pulmonary pathologies represent the third leading cause of death in the elderly population. Evidence-based projections suggest that >65 (years old) individuals will account for approximately a quarter of the world population before the turn of the century. Genomic instability, telomere attrition, epigenetic alterations, loss of proteostasis, deregulated nutrient sensing, mitochondrial dysfunction, cellular senescence, stem cell exhaustion, and altered intercellular communication, are described as the nine "hallmarks" that govern cellular fitness. Any deviation from the normal pattern initiates a complex cascade of events culminating to a disease state. This blueprint, originally employed to describe aberrant changes in cancer cells, can be also used to describe aging and fibrosis. Pulmonary fibrosis (PF) is the result of a progressive decline in injury resolution processes stemming from endogenous (physiological decline or somatic mutations) or exogenous stress. Environmental, dietary or occupational exposure accelerates the pathogenesis of a senescent phenotype based on (1) window of exposure; (2) dose, duration, recurrence; and (3) cells type being targeted. As the lung ages, the threshold to generate an irreversibly senescent phenotype is lowered. However, we do not have sufficient knowledge to make accurate predictions. In this review, we provide an assessment of the literature that interrogates lung epithelial, mesenchymal, and immune senescence at the intersection of aging, environmental exposure and pulmonary fibrosis.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Aging, longevity, and the role of environmental stressors: a focus on wildfire smoke and air quality

This review explores how environmental stressors, particularly wildfire smoke, interact with the biological mechanisms of aging, including telomere attrition, cellular senescence, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Preliminary evidence suggests that inhaled wildfire smoke toxicants may accelerate neurological aging markers and compromise blood-brain barrier integrity, though the intersection between environmental exposures and aging processes remains under-studied.

Article Tier 2

Tracing the cellular consequences of polyethylene microplastics: senescence and apoptosis in A549 and Raw 264.7 macrophage cells

Researchers exposed human lung epithelial cells (A549) and macrophages (Raw 264.7) to sub-500 nm polyethylene microplastics and found dose-dependent induction of cellular senescence and apoptosis. The results suggest that PE microplastic inhalation could contribute to premature lung cell aging and airway inflammation.

Article Tier 2

Microplastics exposure causes the senescence of human lung epithelial cells and mouse lungs by inducing ROS signaling

Researchers found that four common types of microplastics all caused premature aging (senescence) in human lung cells by increasing harmful reactive oxygen species, and that an antioxidant treatment could partially reverse this effect. When PVC microplastics were introduced into mouse lungs, the animals showed reduced physical function, increased body-wide inflammation, and accumulation of aged cells, suggesting that inhaling microplastics could accelerate lung aging.

Article Tier 2

Cigarette Smoke Exposure Increases Glucose‐6‐phosphate Dehydrogenase, Autophagy, Fibrosis, and Senescence in Kidney Cells In Vitro and In Vivo

Cigarette smoke extract decreased cell viability and increased autophagy, fibrosis-related proteins, and cellular senescence markers in human kidney proximal tubular cells in vitro, with similar effects confirmed in vivo, suggesting cigarette smoke as a risk factor for kidney damage.

Article Tier 2

A particle of concern: explored and proposed underlying mechanisms of microplastic-induced lung damage and pulmonary fibrosis

This paper explores how inhaled microplastics may cause lung damage and scarring (pulmonary fibrosis) through several biological pathways. The research identifies signaling pathways that could be targeted for future treatments to reduce microplastic-induced lung damage. This is relevant to human health because people regularly breathe in airborne microplastic particles.

Share this paper