Free radical theory of aging
DEFreie-Radikale-Theorie des Alterns
The free radical theory of aging, proposed by Denham Harman in 1956, originally attributed aging to cumulative cellular damage from oxygen-derived free radicals, drawing on rate-of-living and oxygen-toxicity reasoning. Harman's 1972 update, the mitochondrial free radical theory of aging (MFRTA), specifically implicated mitochondrial ROS and mtDNA as the central drivers. While oxidative damage is undeniably involved, large antioxidant trials largely failed, and the theory is now considered partial. Modern frameworks integrate it with mitochondrial dysfunction and redox signaling.
