Why do we get wrinkles as we age?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Collagen and elastin break down
Skin cells multiply faster — Wrong. Skin cell production actually slows with age, not speeds up. Wrinkles form because collagen and elastin proteins that keep skin firm and elastic gradually break down over time.
Collagen and elastin break down ✓ — Correct! Wrinkles develop as skin loses its structural proteins. Collagen provides firmness while elastin allows skin to stretch and bounce back. With age, fibroblast cells produce less of these proteins, and existing ones break down from UV damage, oxidation, and repeated facial expressions. The skin becomes thinner, drier, and less elastic, forming permanent creases.
Blood vessels expand — Wrong. Blood vessel changes affect skin color and circulation, but wrinkles form due to decreased production and breakdown of collagen and elastin proteins in the dermal layer.
More Human Biology questions
- In aging mice and humans, transcript length explained many RNA changes. What pattern appeared?
- Why do different organs in mammals show different gene activity patterns related to longevity?
- Why does calorie restriction affect different aging pathways than chronic disease in mice?
- Two people can be the same age but show different RNA-module aging. What would a module clock show?
- Aging RNA signals grouped into modules, not one score. What does a module view reveal?
- Why do different tissues in the body age at different rates?
