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NIH SenNet Consortium: Mapping Senescent Cells in the Human Body to Understand Health and Disease

Authors :
Patty Lee
Philip Blood
Katy Börner
Judith Campisi
Feng Chen
Heike Daldrup-Link
Phil De Jager
Li Ding
Francesca E. Duncan
Oliver Eickelberg
Rong Fan
Toren Finkel
Vesna Garovic
Nils Gehlenborg
Carolyn Glass
Ziv Bar-Joseph
Pragati Katiyar
So-Jin Kim
Melanie Königshoff
George Kuchel
Haesung Lee
Jun H. Lee
Jian Ma
Qin Ma
Simon Melov
Kay Metis
Ana L. Mora
Nicolas Musi
Nicola Neretti
João F. Passos
Irfan Rahman
Juan Carlos Rivera-Mulia
Paul Robson
Mauricio Rojas
Ananda L. Roy
Birgit Schilling
Pixu Shi
Jonathan Silverstein
Vidyani Suryadevera
Jichun Xie
Jinhua Wang
An-Kwok Ian Wong
Laura Niedernhofer
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

Cells respond to a myriad of stressors by senescing, acquiring stable growth arrest, morphologic and metabolic changes, and a senescence-associated-secretory-phenotype (SASP). The heterogeneity of senescent cells (SnCs) and their SASP is vast, yet poorly characterized. SnCs have diverse roles in health and disease and are therapeutically targetable, making characterization of SnCs and harmonization of their nomenclature a priority. The Cellular Senescence Network (SenNet), a NIH Common Fund initiative, will leverage emerging single cell and spatial-omics to identify and map SnCs in numerous organs across the lifespan of humans and mice. A common coordinate framework will integrate the data, using validated, standardized methods, creating public 4-dimensional SnC atlases. Key SenNet deliverables include development of innovative tools/technologies to detect SnCs, biomarker discovery, common annotations to describe SnCs and extensive public data sets. The goal is to comprehensively understand and map SnCs for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes to improve human health.

Subjects

Subjects :
cell_developmental_biology

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e62e81b0034df46256f5d3dcb4a4e032