Worm Lifespan Extended To Five to Six Times Normal 79
Trillian_1138 writes "Scientific America has a
brief article, only two paragraphs, sumarizing research from a recently released longevity study done on worms. The worms, Caenorhabditis elegans, have been known to live 124 days, "the equivalent of a human reaching his 500th birthday." In addition, in worms which had their insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) altere, "lived six times longer than normal worms and remained active for most of their lives." "These life-span extensions, which are the longest mean life-span extensions every produced in any organism, are particularly intriguing," the team writes, "because the insulin/IGF-1 pathway controls longevity in many species, including mammals." Humans already live significantly longer than only a century ago, in large part simply from hygiene advances. What might the effects on society be if gene therapy or other medical treatement humans lived to be 500?"
I don't like your chances (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I don't like your chances (Score:1)
Re:I don't like your chances (Score:1)
I'd take a measly extra 200 years, though.
Re:I don't like your chances (Score:1)
The next boom (Score:2, Funny)
Time to invest in zimmer frame and artificial hip manufacturers.
Re: Hey, Hemos, Haven't Had Your Coffee Yet, Eh? (Score:1)
> Scientific American has a brief article (only two paragraphs) sumarizing research from a recently released longevity study done on worms. The worms, Caenorhabditis elegans, have been known to live 124 days, "the equivalent of a human reaching his 500th birthday."
So... what's the conversion factor between "worm days" and "dog years"?
DAMMIT (Score:3, Funny)
I, for one, welcome our new immortal legislative overlords.
=Smidge=
Worms? Ha, Worms! (Score:1)
"Hum? What happenned? They found a computer that STILL has code red?... Ho, REAL worms.... right..."
Anyway, I already read about this years ago: this is not the first... Although the last time was about 80 day, or 300 humans-years.
And like the article said it left the worms very lethargic...
Live 500 years but have a brain that works slower than molasse at -40... sure....
But can the brain handle it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Its one thing to physically live for 500 years, its another thing to mentally thrive for that long. Even if our bodies can be tweaked to last, its not clear that our minds can.
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
On this flip side, would violent crime and war be taken so lightly if people lived for half a millinia? A race of immortals would probably find that they get along much better than they ever did as dying creatures. ("So what if those guys are occupying my land for two centuries? There's plenty of time to reclaim it before middle age...", "That guy screwed me out a million bucks! It'll take fifty years to
Changing timescales = changing priorities (Score:2)
Yes, people's priorities would change and some of the impacts might be rather strange. For example, would retirement ages be pushed to 400. Since no company or government pension plan could afford to give someone 440 years of retirement in exchange for 40 years work, these polices would need to shift. Yet, anyone who abuses their body would probably not be able to work til 400 and be force to retire
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
I think it is true that the people we are now are not emotionally well equipped to live very long lives. However, the rhythms of life now are very diferent from what they were for our shorter-lived ancestors, and somehow we adapt.
Is there any evidence that healthy older people are in any way mentally impaired? Sure, some suffer from senile dementia or Alzheimer's, but many don't. Frank Lloyd Wright did much of his more famous work after turning 70, for example.
Presumably living longer would mean aging m
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:1)
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
Re: What makes you think the human brain cna handle living 20 years?
I would say that the current world state suggests that the answer is probably yes. As screwed up as some parts of the world are, much of the world does OK. Admittedly, the effective sample size of one -- we could have a nuclear exchange tomorrow, a nasty biological epidemic, or irretrievably trash the environment. Whether such an event could be ascribed to the brain not handling X years of life, or the brain not
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
One of the most disturbing aspects of his take on extreme old age was his assumption that by the time you were a couple of hundred years old you would have completely forgotten *all* of your childhood and even most of their first century of adulthood, consigning all memories of what we turn-of-the-millennium humans
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
I also, like Kim Stanley Robinson (good books, BTW), wonder about the total capacity of the brain and whether it would be forced to dump early memorie
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
I believe memory persists mainly through recall and rehearsal; as one tends to rehearse recent memories more, and remote memories less and less, the old memories simply fade while fresher ones are added. In which case it's not "capacity" (as so famously outlined by Conan Doyle) as such that underlies the
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
Re:But can the brain handle it? (Score:2)
Incidentally, you suggested that the brain's memory capacity itself is finite. Well sure it must be, but taken in isolation the maximum information density of vertebrate
Long life means greater fear of death (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Long life means greater fear of death (Score:3, Interesting)
Or, spend your time trying to desig
Re:Long life means greater fear of death (Score:1)
Are you sure you want this? (Score:2, Informative)
Cynthia Kenyon of the University of California at San Francisco and her colleagues perturbed genes in C. elegans that affect the activity of insulin and removed gonad tissue...
"Removed gonad tissue?" They cut off their balls! and this is considered living?!
Re:Are you sure you want this? (Score:1)
It's not that you would actually live 500 years... it's just that 50 years without 'nads would feel that long.
Re:Are you sure you want this? (Score:2)
A pretty pointless life when... (Score:1)
hard to adjust. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:hard to adjust. (Score:2)
Social Security is already under strain, it wouldn't even takes this to make that fail.
Perhaps that is for the better though,
BLASTer (Score:3, Funny)
How many people read the headline as a way to extend the self-expire date of SoBig and the Blaster worm?
Need...more...coffee.
at what price longevity? (Score:3, Funny)
So the Doctor told me, "...okay so you can live for 500 years. All we have to do is remove your nads."
Clearly, this process is do for some refinement before it's ready for mass comsumption. Ananova also covers this. [ananova.com]
Re:at what price longevity? (Score:3, Funny)
Well, that would certainly cure the nasty overpopulation side-effect, wouldn't it?
What can I do in 500 years? (Score:2)
Don't forget we can keep sending people there too.
Or wait... would infecting another planet be a bad thing?
Re:What can I do in 500 years? (Score:2)
Humanity is Mother Nature's way of getting the biosphere off of its dependence on Planet Earth. No number of dogs will ever create a thriving ecosphere on the Moon.
Environmentalists too long used the idea of "Everything Man do to environment Bad!" should be pushing for space colonization with everything they have; there's an entire dead planet right on our doorstep waiting for us to give it life. The worst case scenario for the Moon's ecosphere is
Re:What can I do in 500 years? (Score:2)
Ugh (Score:2, Funny)
Too early in the day for optimism? (Score:2)
Article: Scientists may be able to extend lives.
Slashdot: Grumble, gloom, doom, complain, pessimism, joke, off topic.
At the time of this posting, no one had anything good to say.
Wait one minute! (Score:2)
It's also well-known that low-cal diets will cause you to live longer, but who wants to live like that?
Low-cal vs. low-CARB (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, low-carb is still politically incorrect. Quacks like Ornish and McDougal still rule the so-called 'medical' establishment, although some actual research seems to be surfacing in support of low-carb despite th
Re:Low-cal vs. low-CARB (Score:2)
Plus, losing the gonads does NOT necessarily mean the end of a satisfying sex life.
Guess you haven't read Voltaire's Candide, eh?
it is good, but let it be for all (Score:3, Interesting)
HOWEVER, I don't think it would work that way. I believe that after about 5-20 years of it being only for the rich, there would be such a movement to make the operation and freely available to all, that governments would do so for fear of revolution.
I don't think that the short-lived poor would tolerate the long-lived rich for very long. Mortals don't dig the immortals who deny mortals immortality.
Re:it is good, but let it be for all (Score:2)
Re:it is good, but let it be for all (Score:2)
Read 'em. good books. I also really like the author's book, "Orange County"
Re:it is good, but let it be for all (Score:2)
there's plenty of medical procedures that fall into that category alreaady. Come to think of it, do half the people on the planet now get any medical care?
Re:it is good, but let it be for all (Score:2)
there's plenty of medical procedures that fall into that category alreaady. Come to think of it, do half the people on the planet now get any medical care?
well i agree with you, but I think that this is different. When people start seeing 80 year old people looking like their 20, people won't be so passive. This is an offer of (near) immortality, a fountain of youth, not a heart operation.
Re:it is good, but let it be for all (Score:2)
Just look what happened to Numenor!
overpopulation (Score:1)
Also unfair distribution could lead to an upper class who have exclusive rights to things like this.
Re:overpopulation (Score:1)
What is the capacity of the human brain? (Score:1)
Kim Stanley Robinson deals with this a little bit in the Red/Green/Blue Mars trilogy [amazon.com].
Just run fdisk (Score:1)
downside (Score:1)
Prevents Aging?? (Score:1)
Not a good idea to extend human life yet (Score:4, Interesting)
Seriously though, while the article is facinating and may eventually lead to some great breakthroughs in life extention, I don't think humanity as civilization is socially ready for such huge extentions in the lifespan. As was pointed out we are already living about twice as long as we did 500 years ago, and what has happened? We have overpopulated. The great majority of our current world problems come from too many people.
Famine, war, plauge, class inequality, poverty, pollution, environmental damage, you name it, it relates directly or indirectly to population. Our technology has been able to barely keep our heads above water, but look around and you will see that while we are fighting the good fight we are aren't winning just doing a losing holding action. Multiply lifespans by 5 and the total population would quickly overcome all efforts, or worse.
How worse? Say the process is very expensive. If you think class wars and the struggle between the haves and have-nots is bad now, just wait till the Bill Gates or Kim Jong-Ils of the future not only have more money than you ever will, but will have more years of life than you can aspire to. Say hello to your new imortal overlord...
While we will probably eventually discover how to extend the human life span indefinatly we will have to change our world society in regards to reproduction before it will spell anything but our doom if we succeed.
The "proof" of this can be examined in the following lines of thought.
People are a resource. The more of a resource that is available the less value of that resource. Thus the more people the less they are worth. So the value of human life, and the value of human labor goes down with each increase in the human population. In the past geography and cultural barriers have ment that seperated cultures could develop "independently" leaving "under" populated areas like the United States or Europe to thrive and produce high qualities of living and an abundance of natural resources - letting them dominate other regions that did not have the same advantages. As the world "shrinks" due to easy access to fast transportation and communication these benefits are dilluted and the world becomes more of one community, creating a greater equality. Unfortunatly for some, equality will mean moving down if you were on the top. This means that population issues are not the problem of "Those people" , "That ethnic group" or "That Country," but of all citizens of the planet who will share the responsibility.
Do you like democracy? The existance of the middle class? Technology? Then you should thank heaven for the Black Plauge. The black plauge made the rise of the middle class possilbe and increased the value of human life throughout Europe. The plauge wiped out huge swaths of the population in europe. While horribly tragic for those who lost their lives or the lives of loved ones this huge reduction in population of europe made people and human labor worth significantly more than it was before. This meant that those who wanted to use that labor (nobles/kings/economicly powerful) had to "pay" more for the resouce. The coin of exchange was not only material resources but the end of serfdom and an increase of human rights and a greater restriction on the power of the Kings/Nobles/Landowners/CEOs. This led eventually to rise of the middle class, representitive government (of one form or another), and the idea that non elite were more than cattle. Also with this increase in the cost of human labor it became more advantageous to develop technology to make better use of the labor and increase the abilities
Perhaps it makes more sense now why unemployment is so high, wa
Re:Not a good idea to extend human life yet (Score:2)
Famine, war, plauge, class inequality, poverty, pollution, environmental damage, you name it, it relates directly or indirectly to population.
Yeah, 500 years ago there was NEVER any famine, war, plauge, class inequality or poverty... NONE WHATSOEVER! Or at least, seeing as it was mostly the dark age
Re:Not a good idea to extend human life yet (Score:3, Insightful)
Famine: an extreme scarcity of food.
Scarcity: the state of being scare.
Scarce: deficient in quantity or number compared with the demand.
War - you have to have people to fight, what do you fight over? Resources. Why do you refight over resources? Because you want more than you have. See Scarce above.
Plague - A plauge is an infectious disease affecting large portions of the populous. Why does it tend to spread so fast and far? Because to many people are crammed together in too small of a spac
Re:Not a good idea to extend human life yet (Score:2)
As was pointed out we are already living about twice as long as we did 500 years ago
The average life expectancy might be double, but the extremes haven't changed all that much. Socrates died in his early 70s, and Sophocles (probably) in his 90s. That was 2400+ years ago (Socrates died in 399 bc, Sophocles in 405 bc). And those are reasonably reliable dates, they're not like Old Testament dates - we can track Sophocles, with huge gaping holes, from 468 to 405 bc, and Socrates from 423 bc (when he was alre
Re:Not a good idea to extend human life yet (Score:2)
While intersting and informative (I didn't know the lifespan of either man) as you point out the Average person did not live that long, thus decreasing the over all population and its rate of increase.
If we developed a method to increase active lifespan by a factor of 5 FOR THE AVERAGE PERSON- especialy if the period of viable fertility is also extended, then this would dramaticly increase population growth thus accelerating the problems of overpopulation
Re:Not a good idea to extend human life yet (Score:1)
Re:Not a good idea to extend human life yet (Score:2)
I would like to point out that all of these symptoms have been with humanity regardless of population size for nearly the entire span of recorded history.
And with the exception of pollution and environmental damage, one can make a case that most of these items are better now, at the height of our population so far, than ever before. The industrial revolution vastl
Longevicity Vaccine (Score:2)
CEO Nwabudike Morgan
MorganLink 3DVision Interview
Ahh yes Alpha Centauri... (Score:1)
unmentioned negative side-effect (Score:2)
And I don't even wanna _think_ how much worse the Slashdot Effect would get!
Then again, BitTorrent would be that much better!
The only real difference (Score:2, Funny)
is that the jokes about 80-year-old female genitalia in junior high school will no longer be funny (funny in the context of 14-year-olds, that is).
What good is longevity? (Score:4, Interesting)
Living up to 500yr old, does that mean you live as an adolescent for the first 100 years?
Or does that mean you become old by age 60, and live the rest of the 440 years as grumpy grandpa Simpson in an old folks home ??
Moreover, how many more years do you have to work to make enough money for the retirement saving now that you can live up to 500 years ??
Drink to forget (Score:2, Interesting)
Social Security (Score:1)
AVERAGES, kids (Score:2, Insightful)
"Worm Lifespan Extended To Five to Six Times Norma (Score:1)
One important line (Score:1)
There's one caveat to the procedure...
If you want to live longer in exchange for your 'nads, you all go for it!
Like... the SPICE! (Score:2)
He who controls the spice control the universe!
It's only fitting that they do this on worms first. Maybe they will grow to tremendous proportions and we can start mining their growth factor stuff, ala Frank Herbert.
That would rule.