Aging is the main risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVD), and senescence in endothelial cells seems to be an initial step in the cascade of events that will culminate with the development of these pathologies. In this chapter, we examine the pathophysiological mechanism(s) involved in endothelial senescence, leading to CVD as well as the biochemical and cellular pathways that may explain the activation and development of the process of endothelial senescence, and we discuss new hypotheses supported by experimental results which suggest that the senescent endothelial cell may induce a general process of vascular senescence. This process is probably induced either by soluble molecules secreted by these senescent cells and/or by intercellular signals transported in cellular vesicles that may be useful as biomarkers and as potential therapeutic targets in endothelial senescence.
Part of the book: Endothelial Dysfunction