articlePLoS BiologyJan 20, 2005GOLD OA

Aging and Death in an Organism That Reproduces by Morphologically Symmetric Division

Inserm · Université Paris Cité · +1 more institution

PubMed
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Abstract

In macroscopic organisms, aging is often obvious; in single-celled organisms, where there is the greatest potential to identify the molecular mechanisms involved, identifying and quantifying aging is harder. The primary results in this area have come from organisms that share the traits of a visibly asymmetric division and an identifiable juvenile phase. As reproductive aging must require a differential distribution of aged and young components between parent and offspring, it has been postulated that organisms without these traits do not age, thus exhibiting functional immortality. Through automated time-lapse microscopy, we followed repeated cycles of reproduction by individual cells of the model organism…

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