Aging is driven by progressive biological changes at the cellular and molecular level that reduce resilience, repair capacity, and metabolic efficiency. These changes accumulate over time and determine healthspan, disease risk, and functional decline.
This hub explores the core mechanisms of aging, how they interact, and why targeting single pathways in isolation is rarely effective. Understanding cellular aging is the foundation of evidence-based longevity strategies.
Cellular Aging Fundamentals
Cellular aging refers to the gradual loss of cellular function, repair capacity, and signaling efficiency that occurs over time.
- What Is Cellular Aging? Core Concepts Explained
- Cell Turnover and Tissue Renewal Over Time
- Why Cells Lose Function With Age
- Cellular Stress and Accumulated Damage
- Aging as a Systems-Level Process
DNA Damage, Repair & Genomic Stability
Genomic instability is a central driver of aging, affecting cell function, replication, and long-term tissue health.
- DNA Damage and Aging Explained
- DNA Repair Mechanisms and Longevity
- Accumulation of Genetic Mutations Over Time
- Oxidative Stress and DNA Integrity
- Can DNA Repair Capacity Be Improved?
Mitochondrial Dysfunction & Energy Decline
Mitochondria regulate energy production, signaling, and stress response. Their decline is a key contributor to aging.
- Mitochondrial Function and Aging
- Why Energy Production Declines With Age
- Mitochondrial Biogenesis Explained
- Oxidative Stress and Mitochondrial Damage
- Supporting Mitochondrial Health Over Time
Cellular Senescence & Chronic Inflammation
Senescent cells stop dividing but remain biologically active, contributing to inflammation and tissue dysfunction.
- What Is Cellular Senescence?
- Senescent Cells and Inflammaging
- Chronic Inflammation as a Driver of Aging
- How Senescent Cells Affect Tissue Function
- Current Research on Senescent Cell Clearance
Hallmarks of Aging Framework
The hallmarks of aging provide a unified framework for understanding how multiple biological processes drive aging.
- The Hallmarks of Aging Explained
- How Aging Mechanisms Interact
- Primary vs Secondary Hallmarks of Aging
- Aging as Loss of Biological Resilience
- Why Targeting One Hallmark Is Not Enough
How to Use This Hub
This page acts as the central resource for understanding the biological mechanisms that drive aging. Each section links to in-depth articles exploring specific cellular processes that influence long-term healthspan and longevity.
