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    Mech Ageing Dev. 2007 Jan;128(1):92-105. Epub 2006 Nov 20.

    Inflammaging and anti-inflammaging: a systemic perspective on aging and longevity emerged from studies in humans.

    Franceschi C, Capri M, Monti D, Giunta S, Olivieri F, Sevini F, Panourgia MP, Invidia L, Celani L, Scurti M, Cevenini E, Castellani GC, Salvioli S.

    Department of Experimental Pathology, University of Bologna, via S. Giacomo 12, 40126 Bologna, Italy. claudio.franceschi@unibo.it

    Abstract

    A large part of the aging phenotype, including immunosenescence, is explained by an imbalance between inflammatory and anti-inflammatory networks, which results in the low grade chronic pro-inflammatory status we proposed to call inflammaging. Within this perspective, healthy aging and longevity are likely the result not only of a lower propensity to mount inflammatory responses but also of efficient anti-inflammatory networks, which in normal aging fail to fully neutralize the inflammatory processes consequent to the lifelong antigenic burden and exposure to damaging agents. Such a global imbalance can be a major driving force for frailty and common age-related pathologies, and should be addressed and studied within an evolutionary-based systems biology perspective. Evidence in favor of this conceptualization largely derives from studies in humans. We thus propose that inflammaging can be flanked by anti-inflammaging as major determinants not only of immunosenescence but eventually of global aging and longevity.

    PMID: 17116321 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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