Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

CellAge

General information

URL: http://genomics.senescence.info/cells
Full name: The Database of Cell Senescence Genes
Description: CellAge, a database of genes associated with cell senescence.
Year founded: 2020
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: United Kingdom

Classification & Tag

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Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: University of Liverpool
Address: Integrative Genomics of Ageing Group, Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L7 8TX UK.
City:
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Country/Region: United Kingdom
Contact name (PI/Team): Cleo L Bishop
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): c.l.bishop@qmul.ac.uk

Publications

32264951
A multidimensional systems biology analysis of cellular senescence in aging and disease. [PMID: 32264951]
Roberto A Avelar, Javier Gómez Ortega, Robi Tacutu, Eleanor J Tyler, Dominic Bennett, Paolo Binetti, Arie Budovsky, Kasit Chatsirisupachai, Emily Johnson, Alex Murray, Samuel Shields, Daniela Tejada-Martinez, Daniel Thornton, Vadim E Fraifeld, Cleo L Bishop, João Pedro de Magalhães

BACKGROUND: Cellular senescence, a permanent state of replicative arrest in otherwise proliferating cells, is a hallmark of aging and has been linked to aging-related diseases. Many genes play a role in cellular senescence, yet a comprehensive understanding of its pathways is still lacking.
RESULTS: We develop CellAge (http://genomics.senescence.info/cells), a manually curated database of 279 human genes driving cellular senescence, and perform various integrative analyses. Genes inducing cellular senescence tend to be overexpressed with age in human tissues and are significantly overrepresented in anti-longevity and tumor-suppressor genes, while genes inhibiting cellular senescence overlap with pro-longevity and oncogenes. Furthermore, cellular senescence genes are strongly conserved in mammals but not in invertebrates. We also build cellular senescence protein-protein interaction and co-expression networks. Clusters in the networks are enriched for cell cycle and immunological processes. Network topological parameters also reveal novel potential cellular senescence regulators. Using siRNAs, we observe that all 26 candidates tested induce at least one marker of senescence with 13 genes (C9orf40, CDC25A, CDCA4, CKAP2, GTF3C4, HAUS4, IMMT, MCM7, MTHFD2, MYBL2, NEK2, NIPA2, and TCEB3) decreasing cell number, activating p16/p21, and undergoing morphological changes that resemble cellular senescence.
CONCLUSIONS: Overall, our work provides a benchmark resource for researchers to study cellular senescence, and our systems biology analyses reveal new insights and gene regulators of cellular senescence.

Genome Biol.. 2020:21(1) | 269 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)

Ranking

All databases:
325/6895 (95.301%)
Interaction:
49/1194 (95.98%)
Health and medicine:
78/1738 (95.57%)
Literature:
41/577 (93.068%)
325
Total Rank
251
Citations
50.2
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2020-09-23
Curated by:
Lin Liu [2021-03-26]
Dong Zou [2020-09-23]