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Bianka M. Zanini

Universidade Federal de Pelotas

ORCID: 0000-0001-8309-8653

Publishes on Circadian rhythm and melatonin, MicroRNA in disease regulation, Reproductive Biology and Fertility. 27 papers and 250 citations.

27Publications
250Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

The Interconnections Between Somatic and Ovarian Aging in Murine Models
Augusto Schneider, Tatiana D. Saccon, Driele N. Garcia et al.|The Journals of Gerontology Series A|2020
Cited by 18Open Access

The mammalian female is born with a limited ovarian reserve of primordial follicles. These primordial follicles are slowly activated throughout the reproductive lifecycle, thereby determining lifecycle length. Once primordial follicles are exhausted, women undergo menopause, which is associated with several metabolic perturbations and a higher mortality risk. Long before exhaustion of the reserve, females experience severe declines in fertility and health. As such, significant efforts have been made to unravel the mechanisms that promote ovarian aging and insufficiency. In this review, we explain how long-living murine models can provide insights in the regulation of ovarian aging. There is now overwhelming evidence that most life-span-extending strategies, and long-living mutant models simultaneously delay ovarian aging. Therefore, it appears that the same mechanisms that regulate somatic aging may also be modulating ovarian aging and germ cell exhaustion. We explore several potential contributing mechanisms including insulin resistance, inflammation, and DNA damage-all of which are hallmarks of cellular aging throughout the body including the ovary. These findings are in alignment with the disposable soma theory of aging, which dictates a trade-off between growth, reproduction, and DNA repair. Therefore, delaying ovarian aging will not only increase the fertility window of middle age females, but may also actively prevent menopausal-related decline in systemic health parameters, compressing the period of morbidity in mid-to-late life in females.