Researchers have demonstrated that many forms of mild, repeated stresses can improve cell function and slow aging. Lack of nutrients, lack of oxygen, heat, cold, oxidative damage, and others have been demonstrated to be beneficial in animal studies. Here, researchers discuss what is known of the response to hypoxia specifically, but note that many of the mechanisms involved are the same as those involved in other forms of stress response. The cell increases maintenance activities, for example, such as the processes of autophagy responsible for recycling damaged proteins and structures. This in turn helps to reduce the risk of cells becoming senescent. A fair amount of effort has been devoting to finding ways to trigger increased autophagy and other beneficial responses to mild stress using small molecule drugs, which has given rise to work on mTOR inhibitors and a range of other classes of compound.
Hypoxia is a physiologically relevant microenvironment in both normal and diseased tissues and has emerged as a potent modulator of cellular senescence and organismal longevity. This review synthesizes evidence that hypoxia delays senescence across diverse experimental systems and species, and highlights mechanisms by which hypoxia rewires chromatin states during senescence-associated transitions. We focus on oxygen- and α-ketoglutarate-dependent epigenetic regulators, particularly histone lysine demethylases, whose catalytic activities are limited under hypoxia. Consequently, histone methylation increases and higher-order chromatin organization is stabilized.
Using oncogene-induced senescence as an experimentally tractable framework, we discuss recent findings showing that hypoxia suppresses senescence-associated histone clipping, preserves nuclear lamina integrity, and restrains large-scale heterochromatin reorganization while leaving canonical cell-cycle arrest largely intact. We further consider emerging links among DNA damage, epigenetic instability, and aging phenotypes, and propose that senescence can be viewed as a breakdown of coordinated epigenetic homeostasis. By integrating these concepts, we position hypoxia and hypoxia-mimetic interventions as promising strategies to modulate aging-associated cellular states and to explore therapeutic opportunities in age-related pathologies.
Link: https://doi.org/10.4062/biomolther.2026.014
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