Mt Rainier

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Showing posts with label memory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memory. Show all posts

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Senescence

Gingko Biloba Tree


Senescence is the process of growing old, or aging.  Senescence can refer to a process that occurs on many different levels, from cellular levels, to the whole body level, to higher organizational levels and including physical and psychological structures.

Aging occurs at different rates and different times in different life forms.  Senescence is directly or indirectly a major cause of death.  Senescence may reflect underlying biological processes, mediated by gene expression, can reflect programmed cell death and can be accelerated by environmental factors, such as exposure to radiation.

My 2014 blog article discusses senescence in  the Gingko Biloba Tree, a living fossil dating back to the Permian era (270 million years ago), which exhibits clonal reproduction.  Natural leaf senescence in the Gingko Biloba has been researched in male and female trees, with regards to impacts of reactive species and anti-oxidants on the rates of senescence.

Senescene on a cellular level, expressed as replicative senescence, reflects a cell's attainment of the Hayflick limit.  The Hayflick limit refers to a limit on the shortening of DNA telomeres,  which cap the ends of the DNA strands.  As the cell divides, it loses telomeres in the division process.  The Hayflick limit reflects the end of the telomere line, at which point the cell becomes senescent.  Senescence is accelerated by exposure to reactive oxygen species,  exposure to oncogenes, and to cell to cell fusion, a process where cells join to form what is callled a 'syncytium'.  I discuss a number of the processes that may encourage the early development of senescence in other blog articles, listed below.

Exposure to radiation generates reactive species.  This can include anything from high energy ionizing radiation which liberates electrons from atoms and molecules, to non-ionizing radiation.   Ionizing radiation may include cosmic and gamma rays and some ultraviolet wavelengths.  Geomagnetic storms may result in increased exposure to high energy particles, as would exposure to nuclear radiation.

Non-ionizing radiation includes radar microwaves and those used by cell phones, which can disturb lymphocytes  in rats. Some ultraviolet wavelengths including UVA, UVB and UVC are non-ionizing. Disturbances in the Ozone layer result in increased ultraviolet exposure, with the Antarctic having historically greater ozone depletion than the Arctic. 

 Reactive species can be produced through natural bodily process, in Oxidative Phosphorylation (OXPHOS), in the production of Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) through mitochondrial processes.  The Metabolic Theory of ecology deals with these issues. It reflects Kleiber's Law which relates metabolism to body weight .  I discuss these issues in my blog on "The Odd Couple - The Mitochondria and the Cell Nucleus", where cellular processes are both exposed to and create oxygen radicals.  This article also discusses other sources of reactive species, including pollutants, chemicals and toxins.

Exposure to oncogenes can also lead to senescense.  Oncogenes can arise from a variety of sources, including potentially avian sources which operate within our body's innate and adaptive immune system transcription factors.

Induction of cell-cell fusion, as occurs in syncytium, can also lead to senescence.  Syncytium can form in protists such as rhizarians, in fungi, in heart muscle and skeletal muscle, and, importantly, in the placenta where they take on a meaning relating to group immunity systems, as discussed in my blog article.  The heart is a critical organ in the human body and tests such as the Cardiac MRI Adenosine Stress Test (using a gadolinium contrast agent) tests the ability of the heart to act "in sync".

 Adenosine is an important nucleoside which modulates a variety of important physiological processes, including heart activity, and as an important moderator of the sleep-wakefulness cycle. Caffeine is an antagonist of adenosine receptors in the brain.  The action of Adenosine is also impacted by theophylline (found in tea) and theobromine (found in chocolate). Adenosine is an inhibitor of the central nervous system and relaxes the heart muscle.  Adenosine also increases hair thickness.  The modulation of adenosine may be related to senescence.

Organismal senescence is a decline in the ability of the organism to respond to stress, and an increase in various symptoms characteristic of aging, including a decline in homeostasis, the ability of the body to respond to various cues.  Alzheimer's Disease is one condition which may be associated with senescence, and may relate to various environmental factors as discussed in my blog article.

Senescence can be mitigated through increased exposure to anti-oxidants, which can be obtained through certain foods (e.g. blueberries are a food high in anti-oxidants),  and internally through transcription factors such as superoxide dismutase.

Senescence may be impacted by a variety of processes germane to environmental issues relating to climate change and global warming, including natural processes and anthropogenic forcing (originating in human activity).  These processes may all impact factors germane to reactive oxygen species and anti-oxidants.









Sunday, September 11, 2011

Tenth Anniversary, September 11, 2001 Attacks




September 11, 2001 Damage, World Trade Center, New York, NY, December, 2001 (image on Photoshelter)

It is difficult to believe that ten years has passed since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The destruction of the World Trade Center Twin Towers; the attack at the Pentagon and the heroic action by the passengers of United Flight 93 in bringing down the hijacked jet before it could reach its target in Washington D.C. Almost three thousand lives were lost in the attacks.

So much has happened in the time frame since the attacks, including the war on terrorism instigated by President Bush in the aftermath of the attacks, and a continuation of the fight by President Obama.

Importantly, Osama Bin Laden, whose Al Qaeda organization was responsible for the attacks, was killed in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in a U.S. C.I.A. raid conducted by special forces, including the Navy Seals unit that killed Bin Laden. Bin Laden’s death provides a sense of justice for the horrific damage his organization has done; however, importantly, it also stopped his ability to conduct more attacks. His death, however, may provide the weakened Al Qaeda organization he leaves behind with motivation for future attacks.

These events string themselves along the arrow of time as particularly significant and memorable. They take their place in the hall of memories amongst the family gatherings, the company picnics, the morning rush hour, the vacations and the hometown football victories and vigorously drown them out. We will always remember where we were when the September 11, 2001 attacks were launched. We will remember what we were doing when Osama Bin Laden was killed. These events are etched in our memories and will march down the hallway of time with us as we age and relate this history to the younger generation.

We will remember those who lost their lives. Our hearts go out to them and the families they left behind. We stand behind our government in its efforts to bring Al Qaeda to justice and we applaud the raid against Osama Bin Laden that resulted in his death.

This tragic event has had an impact upon all of us that will be with us the rest of our lives.



September 11 Memorial, Lower Manhattan, NYC, December, 2001 (image on Photoshelter)

While a sense of time may give us pause to consider past events there is no place that shows the impact of time more than its impact on the health of first responders and others in the World Trade Center area who were exposed to the dust from the attack.



New York City Fireman and Police Vehicle, Lower Manhattan, NYC, December, 2001 (image on Photoshelter)

For those exposed to the World Trade Center’s dust, time is not simply a memory of the event; it represents the impact of inhaled noxious pollutants, marching in physiological time within the body, damaging bodily systems. A witches brew of toxic substances contained in the dust has triggered a variety of dangerous health effects. It is clear that as time marches on, the toxic aftermath of September 11, 2001 still impacts first reponders.,

There is a World Trade Center Health Registry for people that lived, worked and went to school in the World Trade Center area.

Legislation has been passed to provide compensation to first responders, however it does not currently cover cancer, as discussed in CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s coverage of the dust impacts of September 11 attacks.

The impacts of the the World Trade Center attacks will more fully emerge as time unfolds and the effects of dust, particles, toxic and alkaline substances play out on the people affected.