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Fanconi anaemia as a human model of accelerated epigenetic and immune ageing.

Eunike Velleuer, Carsten Carlberg
Review Ageing research reviews 2026
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Loại nghiên cứu
Review
Đối tượng nghiên cứu
patients with Fanconi anaemia
Can thiệp
Fanconi anaemia as a human model of accelerated epigenetic and immune ageing. None
Đối chứng
None
Kết quả chính
None
Xu hướng hiệu quả
Negative
Nguy cơ sai lệch
Unclear

Abstract

Fanconi anaemia (FA) is a DNA-repair disorder that compresses multiple hallmarks of ageing into childhood and early adulthood. Persistent genomic instability in FA precipitates oxidative stress, inflammatory remodelling, and metabolic reprogramming, which together erode epigenetic integrity and immune competence. Here we provide evidence FA-specific DNA-repair failure is linked to mitochondrial metabolism, nutrient-sensing networks, and immune dysfunction. In this context, we discuss how these interactions accelerate epigenetic drift and cancer susceptibility. We propose FA as a human "time-lapse" model to separate the sequence and interdependence of selected ageing hallmarks, such as genome instability, epigenetic deregulation, stem cell exhaustion, and immunosenescence, which together contribute to a markedly increased risk of early cancer development. We further highlight nutrigenomic mechanisms, including vitamin D-dependent chromatin remodelling and redox-sensitive cofactors, that modulate epigenetic states and immune resilience. Framing FA within the broader framework of ageing biology suggests testable biomarkers and precision-prevention strategies aimed at stabilising the epigenome, delaying carcinogenesis, and prolonging healthspan.

Tóm lược

FA is proposed as a human “time-lapse” model to separate the sequence and interdependence of selected ageing hallmarks, such as genome instability, epigenetic deregulation, stem cell exhaustion, and immunosenescence which together contribute to a markedly increased risk of early cancer development.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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