Archive for the ‘life extension’ category: Page 244
Jun 24, 2021
Hundreds of birds dying from mystery illness across several states
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: life extension
Jun 24, 2021
Scientists may need to rethink which genes control aging
Posted by Kevin Huang in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension, neuroscience
To better understand the role of bacteria in health and disease, National Institutes of Health researchers fed fruit flies antibiotics and monitored the lifetime activity of hundreds of genes that scientists have traditionally thought control aging. To their surprise, the antibiotics not only extended the lives of the flies but also dramatically changed the activity of many of these genes. Their results suggested that only about 30% of the genes traditionally associated with aging set an animal’s internal clock while the rest reflect the body’s response to bacteria.
“For decades scientists have been developing a hit list of common aging genes. These genes are thought to control the aging process throughout the animal kingdom, from worms to mice to humans,” said Edward Giniger, Ph.D., senior investigator, at the NIH’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) and the senior author of the study published in iScience. “We were shocked to find that only about 30% of these genes may be directly involved in the aging process. We hope that these results will help medical researchers better understand the forces that underlie several age-related disorders.”
The results happened by accident. Dr. Giniger’s team studies the genetics of aging in a type of fruit fly called Drosophila. Previously, the team showed how a hyperactive immune system may play a critical role in the neural damage that underlies several aging brain disorders. However, that study did not examine the role that bacteria may have in this process.
Jun 24, 2021
Inflammatory Proteins May Slow Cognitive Decline in Aging Adults
Posted by Jason Blain in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, life extension, neuroscience
These results suggest that IL-12 and IFN-γ could one day be measured along with other biomarkers to predict future brain health in cognitively normal people–a tool that doesn’t yet exist in medicine.
Summary: Higher levels of two cytokines were associated with slower cognitive decline in aging adults, a new study reports.
Source: Mass General
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Jun 23, 2021
Anti-aging Protein in Blood Cells Helps Slow Cognitive Decline
Posted by Kevin Huang in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, neuroscience
An aging/longevity link, (not sure how novel)
As life expectancies around the world increase, so are the number of people who will experience age-related cognitive decline. The amount of oxygen in the blood declines with age. Aging in the brain might be naturally held at bay by adenosine receptor A2B (ADORA2B), a protein on the membrane of red blood cells which is known to help release oxygen from the blood cells so it can be used by the body.
Aging in the brain is naturally reduced by ADORA2B, which helps get oxygen to the brain when needed. Further testing will be needed to determine whether ADORA2B levels naturally decline with age and whether treatment with drugs that activate ADORA2B can reduce cognitive decline in normal mice.
Continue reading “Anti-aging Protein in Blood Cells Helps Slow Cognitive Decline” »
Jun 23, 2021
Scientists Develop New Gene Therapy Strategy to Delay Aging and Extend Lifespan
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension
😀
Cellular senescence, a state of permanent growth arrest, has emerged as a hallmark and fundamental driver of organismal aging. It is regulated by both genetic and epigenetic factors. Despite a few previously reported aging-associated genes, the identity and roles of additional genes involved in the regulation of human cellular aging remain to be elucidated. Yet, there is a lack of systematic investigation on the intervention of these genes to treat aging and aging-related diseases.
How many aging-promoting genes are there in the human genome? What are the molecular mechanisms by which these genes regulate aging? Can gene therapy alleviate individual aging? Recently, researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences have shed new light on the regulation of aging.
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Jun 23, 2021
Asymmetrex Publishes the First Report of Immortal DNA Strands in Human Stem Cells
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
BOSTON (PRWEB) November 18, 2020
What does it mean for multiplying cells in the body to be immortal? The cell DNA is being replicated over and over again while being divided equally between new cells produced by cell divisions. All the new cell components produced by the DNA code are mixing with the old cell components and being divided between the new cells. So, every cell is a new cell. There is nothing really immortal about any of them. Right?
Not quite. Stem cells responsible for renewing other mature body cells are different. For a long time, tissue cell scientists had a somewhat nebulous idea that stem cells had a special longevity in organs and tissues – that they were immortal cells, lasting for as long as the human lifespan. However, no one had a molecular concept for this idea of stem cell immortality until John Cairns, a pioneer of DNA replication, started thinking about DNA mutations and cancer in the 1970’s.
Jun 23, 2021
Most popular human cell in science gets sequenced
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, science
Circa 2013 henrietta lacks unlimited cell division sequenced allowing for immortality.
The HeLa cell genome is riddled with errors, raising questions about its continued use.
Jun 21, 2021
NASA inches closer to printing artificial organs in space
Posted by Dan Lovy in categories: 3D printing, bioengineering, biotech/medical, life extension
In America, at least 17 people a day die waiting for an organ transplant. But instead of waiting for a donor to die, what if we could someday grow our own organs?
Last week, six years after NASA announced its Vascular Tissue Challenge, a competition designed to accelerate research that could someday lead to artificial organs, the agency named two winning teams. The challenge required teams to create thick, vascularized human organ tissue that could survive for 30 days.
The two teams, named Winston and WFIRM, both from the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, used different 3D-printing techniques to create lab-grown liver tissue that would satisfy all of NASA’s requirements and maintain their function.
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Jun 21, 2021
Insulin Sensitivity Is A Hallmark Of Longevity
Posted by Mike Lustgarten in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
HOMA calculator: https://www.omnicalculator.com/health/homa-ir.
Papers referenced in the video:
Growth hormone-releasing hormone disruption extends lifespan and regulates response to caloric restriction in mice.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24175087/
Continue reading “Insulin Sensitivity Is A Hallmark Of Longevity” »