Cellular senescence as a therapeutic target to improve renal transplantation outcome.
van Willigenburg. Hester H; de Keizer. Peter L J PLJ; de Bruin. Ron W F RWF
Key Findings
- Aging kidneys accumulate senescent cells that cause inflammation and reduce regeneration.
- Ischemia-reperfusion injury during transplantation can increase senescent cell burden.
- Senolytic compounds have restored tissue health and kidney function in aged animal models.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, the review highlights that senolytic strategies (including peptides like FOXO4‑DRI) may help protect or repair kidney tissue after injury, but concrete dosing protocols and safety data for humans are still lacking. It suggests a promising research direction rather than an immediate, actionable regimen.
Summary
Older donor kidneys have more cells that stop dividing and release inflammatory signals, which makes them more vulnerable during transplants. Removing these senescent cells with drugs (called senolytics) has been shown in mice to improve kidney function and overall health, suggesting a possible way to make older kidneys work better for transplants.
Abstract
Kidney transplants from aged donors are more vulnerable to ischemic injury, suffer more from delayed graft function and have a lower graft survival compared to kidneys from younger donors. On a cellular level, aging results in an increase in cells that are in a permanent cell cycle arrest, termed senescence, which secrete a range of pro-inflammatory cytokines and growth factors. Consequently, these senescent cells negatively influence the local milieu by causing inflammaging, and by reducing the regenerative capacity of the kidney. Moreover, the oxidative damage that is inflicted by ischemia-reperfusion injury during transplantation can induce senescence and accelerate aging. In this review, we describe recent developments in the understanding of the biology of aging that have led to the development of a new class of therapeutic agents aimed at eliminating senescent cells. These compounds have already shown to be able to restore tissue homeostasis in old mice, improve kidney function and general health- and lifespan. Use of these anti-senescence compounds holds great promise to improve the quality of marginal donor kidneys as well as to remove senescent cells induced by ischemia-reperfusion injury. Altogether, senescent cell removal may increase the donor pool, relieving the growing organ shortage and improve long-term transplantation outcome.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-02-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.phrs.2018.02.015
33
111