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Medicine Science

Scientists Reverse Aging Process In Rat Brain Stem Cells (newsweek.com) 34

Scientists who discovered aging appears to be related to the stiffness of the environment where cells live have reversed the process in rat brain stem cells. Newsweek reports: Researchers studied oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) in young and old rat brains, and found they were affected by stiffness in the organ caused by aging. These stem cells, meaning they can turn into other types of cell, are found in the central nervous system. The team also found that a protein called Piezo1, which senses how stiff its surroundings are, could be harnessed to trick stem cells into thinking they were in a younger, softer environment. Deleting the protein from the OPCs in older rat brains appeared to make them behave younger. Taking OPCs from older rats and putting them in younger rodents was also found to rejuvenate the cells.

Kevin Chalut, a biophysicist at the University of Cambridge and co-author of the study published in the journal Nature told Newsweek: "The study tells us that aging, at least for stem cells we studied, is not driven by anything intrinsic to the cell. It is instead driven by the environment. This was already known to be a factor, but the true significance here is to show that it is the stiffness of the environment alone that drives the aging of the stem cells. "This is rather remarkable because it suggests an entirely new way of thinking about what controls aging in stem cells, and furthermore, since stiffness is a single factor from the environment, it suggest a means to straightforwardly reverse aging in stem cells'" Chalut explained.

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Scientists Reverse Aging Process In Rat Brain Stem Cells

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  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Thursday August 15, 2019 @03:32AM (#59088632)

    I think it was called Flowers for Algernon

    And then there was also "the man who wanted stars' (but that one reversed aging in the whole body of a rat - it grew back a leg

  • What types of cells did the researchers study? What does the term "stem cells" mean?

    You would think that they could put this information at least once in the submission!

    • What does the term "stem cells" mean?

      You would think that they could put this information at least once in the submission!

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stem_cell

      derp

    • Yeah why didn't they define "brain" and "cell" while they were at it too?

      And I'm sick of all those articles that presume I know what "Linux" is. Like, hello, they think this is a site for people with an interest in STEM and computers or something?
    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      I can understand if you don't RTFA, but at least RTFS!!!

      These stem cells, meaning they can turn into other types of cell, are found in the central nervous system.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      What types of cells did the researchers study? What does the term "stem cells" mean?

      They came from the brain stem, obviously.

  • J F**king C, who edited this crap?

    • Clearly 3 monkeys fighting over a toothbrush.

      • Clearly 3 monkeys fighting over a toothbrush.

        You forgot to append ,"whose stem cells, meaning they can turn into other types of cell, are found in the central nervous system." to the end of that.

        • Researchers studied oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) in young and old rat brains, and found they were affected by stiffness in the organ caused by aging. These stem cells, meaning they can turn into other types of cell, are found in the central nervous system. Researchers studied oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) in young and old rat brains, and found they were affected by stiffness in the organ caused by aging. These stem cells, meaning they can turn into other types of cell, are found in the central nervous system.

          So, those cells, are they stem cells? Also, where are they found? I don't think that was made clear enough.

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      Someone who did not read it through before posting. Someone who did not read it through before posting. Apparently.

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      BeauHD got distracted when he read the word "stiffness"
  • oh my god "increasing brain stiffness as we age causes brain stem cell dysfunction" A stiff brain!!! that's what I have had all these years.... I am happy to put a name to it.... Honestly .... brain stiffness .... that makes me soo happy to read......
  • by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Thursday August 15, 2019 @05:40AM (#59088810)
    I'm still going to need you to get off my lawn.
  • Just what we need. Older rats in New York have problems with pizza slices, perhaps this will help.

  • And all this time I thought stiffness and age were inversely related....

    • for that kind of stiffness it's more like lack of exercise and obesity are the enemies. you get more than rock hard muscles from working out (or working hard...but I push buttons for a living so have to exercise, yuck)

  • Extending the lifespan of rat brain cells is rather pointless, politicians spend way too much in office now. If there was any reason for term limits, it would be this.
    • Extending the lifespan of rat brain cells is an important step towards eventually enabling humans to spend ever increasing amounts of time glued to social media while driving and walking.
  • People in the future are really going to be annoyed at us for leaving them all these immortal rats.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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