Journal article
New Vistas for Withania somnifera in Signal Transduction of Inflammation and Aging
Pharmaceutical research
02 Apr 2026
PMID: 41927962
Featured in Collection : Drexel's Newest Publications
Abstract
Aging in humans is a multidimensional complexity featured by systematic chronic inflammation and further accompanied by organ dysfunction, gut dysbiosis, immune senescence, and age-related diseases. Chronic inflammation in cells relates to secretory factors like the senescence-associated secretory phenotype which induces senescence in normal cells. Simultaneously, immune senescence is promoted by chronic inflammation, resulting in an impaired immune system unable to clear out senescent cells and inflammatory factors. Long term accumulation of elevated inflammatory factors in cells causes organ damage and leads to other age-related disorders. Eliminating inflammation could be a viable anti-aging strategy since it has been identified as an endogenous component in aging. Lately, products of natural origin have been gaining attention in combating age-related diseases and chronic inflammation. Various in vitro, in vivo, and clinical studies have well documented the role of Withania somnifera (WS) in alleviating inflammation and aging in cells by mediating several cellular signaling pathways. This review discusses the features and mechanisms of inflammation and aging (inflammaging) and the modulation of key associated pathways by WS, examining its role as a promising candidate for future strategies against inflammaging.
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Details
- Title
- New Vistas for Withania somnifera in Signal Transduction of Inflammation and Aging
- Creators
- Eshita Sharma - USV (India)Dilip Mehta - USV (India)Prem Muthuraj - USV (India)Sangita Panda - USV (India)Saiprasad Ajgaonkar - Drexel University, College of MedicineDishant Maniar - USV (India)Aswathi Biju - Saveetha UniversitySujit Nair - Welspun (India)
- Publication Details
- Pharmaceutical research
- Publisher
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- College of Medicine
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:001731758300001
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-105034854645
- Other Identifier
- 991022172973004721