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Journal ArticleDOI

Progressive Loss of the Proliferative Response of Senescing Wi-38 Cells to Platelet-derived Growth Factor, Epidermal Growth Factor, Insulin, Transferrin, and Dexamethasone

TLDR
Although as cultures senesced, they became progressively less responsive to mitogenic stimulation, the concentration of epidermal growth factor, insulin, transferrin, and dexamethasone that elicited the maximum proliferative response did not change as a function of age.
Abstract
Normal human diploid cell lines such as WI-38 display a progressive loss of responsiveness to the mitogenic components in serum. Using a serum-free, hormone-growth factor supplemented medium for WI-38 cells (Phillips & Cristofalo, 1980, 1981), we examined the dose-response relationships of cells to the individual growth factor at various in vitro ages. Although as cultures senesced, they became progressively less responsive to mitogenic stimulation, the concentration of epidermal growth factor (25 ng/ml), insulin (5 micrograms/ml), transferrin (5 micrograms/ml), and dexamethasone (55 ng/ml) that elicited the maximum proliferative response did not change as a function of age. As cultures age they may require increasing amounts of platelet-derived growth factor to elicit the maximum mitogenic response.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Replicative senescence: a critical review.

TL;DR: This review discusses replicative senescence in the light of current information on signal transduction and mitogenesis, cell stress, apoptosis, telomere changes and finally replicativesenescence as a model of aging in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of ascorbic acid on proliferation and collagen synthesis in relation to the donor age of human dermal fibroblasts

TL;DR: Ascorbic acid appears capable of overcoming the reduced proliferative capacity of elderly dermal fibroblasts, as well as increasing collagen synthesis in elderly cells by similar degrees as in newborn cells even though basal levels of collagen synthesis are age dependent.
Journal ArticleDOI

TGF‐β1 induces the expression of type I collagen and SPARC, and enhances contraction of collagen gels, by fibroblasts from young and aged donors

TL;DR: It appears that the impaired wound healing noted in the aged does not result from a failure of their dermal fibroblasts to respond to this cytokine, and cells from both young and aged donors exhibited similar biosynthetic and contractile properties with exposure to TGF‐β1.
Journal Article

The effects of ageing on cutaneous wound healing in mammals.

TL;DR: A review on the effects of advancing age on wound healing can be found in this paper, where the authors highlight the need for well designed research into an increasingly important field of wound repair.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular senescence revisited: a review.

TL;DR: The field of cellular senescence (cytogerontology) is reviewed, and the view that the life span of normal diploid cells in culture is limited, is under genetic control, and is capable of being modified is included.
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