Vol. 283, Issue 5, G1020-G1026, November 2002
THEME
Aging and Neural Control of the GI Tract
III. Senescent
enteric nervous system: lessons from extraintestinal sites and
nonmammalian species
John W.
Wiley
University of Michigan General Clinical Research Center,
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48109-0108
Functional changes in GI motility
associated with advanced age include slowing of gastric emptying,
decreased peristalsis, and slowing of colonic transit. These changes
appear to be associated with region-specific loss of neurons and
impaired function. The mechanism(s) underlying physiological aging are
likely to be multifactorial. Alterations in specific signal
transduction pathways have been reported at the level of the receptor
and postreceptor events including kinase expression and function,
mitochondrial function, and activation of the apoptosis
cascade. Advanced age is associated with increased oxidative stress and
its concomitant effects on cellular function. Whereas no specific genes
have been causally linked to life span in mammals, studies involving
nonmammalian species suggest that specific genes are involved in
determining life span and age-related changes in cellular function.
Caloric restriction is the only intervention shown to slow aging in a variety of species. Recent studies implicate a possible role for an
insulin/IGF-I cascade in the region- and tissue-specific changes associated with physiological aging.
apoptosis; oxidative stress; senescence; neuron; neurodegeneration