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Are Chronic Degenerative Diseases Part of the Ageing Process?: Insights from Comparative Biology

Are Chronic Degenerative Diseases Part of the Ageing Process?: Insights from Comparative Biology

9781634830249
497.64 zł
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Description
Most of the DNA in the human genome does not encode proteins but is involved in regulatory functions. In addition, the human genome is characterized by an extensive array of structural DNA variants arising from de novo mutations plus accumulated structural variants transmitted through an individuals lineage. The result is that each person has a unique genome which is expressed as that persons unique phenotype. Ageing can be understood on both the species and individual level. Each species has a programmed ageing and mortality pattern, but within those broad species-specific boundaries there is considerable individual variation. At the individual level, ageing reflects the integrated effects of that individuals unique mix of DNA structural variants, unique experience-specific epigenetic marks and imperfectly repaired genomic and cellular damage. This book examines human chronic degenerative diseases which are not diseases, but rather variations of the ageing process across individuals.
Product Details
74967
9781634830249
9781634830249

Data sheet

Publication date
2015
Issue number
1
Cover
paperback
Pages count
312
Dimensions (mm)
180.00 x 260.00
Weight (g)
444
  • Introduction; Background; Atherosclerotic Vascular Disease; Hypertension; Diabetes Mellitus (Type 2); Dementia; Conclusions; Bibliography; Index.
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