The Human Body

This site is all about human body. From basics to higher levels. It is equally useful to children as well as professionals.

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Multicellular organisms, including people, age and eventually die; our cells do not have infinite life spans. It has been proposed that some cells capable of mitosis are limited to a certain number of divisions; that is, every division is sort of a tick-tock off a biological clock. We do not yet know exactly what this cellular biological clock is. There is evidence that the ends of chromosomes, called telomeres, may be an aspect of it. With each cell division, part of the telomeres is lost (rather like a piece of rope fraying at both ends), and eventually the telomeres are gone. With the next division, the ends of the chromosomes, actual genes, begin to be lost. This may be one signal that a cell’s life span has come to an end (there are probably many different kinds of signals).

Cellular aging also involves the inevitable deterioration of membranes and cell organelles. Just as the parts of a car break down in time, so too will cells. Unlike cars or machines, however, cells can often repair themselves, but they do  have limits. As cells  age, structural proteins  break down  and  are not
replaced, or necessary enzymes are not synthesized. Proteins called chaperones, which are responsible for the  proper folding of many other proteins and for the repair or disposal of damaged  proteins, no
longer function as well as cells age. Without chaperones, damaged proteins accumulate within cells and
disrupt normal cellular processes. Clinical manifestations of impaired chaperones include cataracts and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and Huntington’s disease.

Much about the chemistry of the aging process remains a mystery, though we can describe what happens to organs and to the body as a whole. Keep in mind that a system is the sum of its cells, in tissues and organs, and that all aging is ultimately at the cellular level.

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