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Medicine Science

Reversal of Biological Clock Restores Vision In Old Mice (scitechdaily.com) 53

John Trumpian shares a report from SciTechDaily: Harvard Medical School scientists have successfully restored vision in mice by turning back the clock on aged eye cells in the retina to recapture youthful gene function. The team's work, described today in Nature, represents the first demonstration that it may be possible to safely reprogram complex tissues, such as the nerve cells of the eye, to an earlier age. In addition to resetting the cells' aging clock, the researchers successfully reversed vision loss in animals with a condition mimicking human glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness around the world.

The achievement represents the first successful attempt to reverse glaucoma-induced vision loss, rather than merely stem its progression, the team said. If replicated through further studies, the approach could pave the way for therapies to promote tissue repair across various organs and reverse aging and age-related diseases in humans. Sinclair and colleagues caution that the findings remain to be replicated in further studies, including in different animal models, before any human experiments. Nonetheless, they add, the results offer a proof of concept and a pathway to designing treatments for a range of age-related human diseases.

For their work, the team used an adeno-associated virus (AAV) as a vehicle to deliver into the retinas of mice three youth-restoring genes -- Oct4, Sox2 and Klf4 -- that are normally switched on during embryonic development. The three genes, together with a fourth one, which was not used in this work, are collectively known as Yamanaka factors. The treatment had multiple beneficial effects on the eye. First, it promoted nerve regeneration following optic-nerve injury in mice with damaged optic nerves. Second, it reversed vision loss in animals with a condition mimicking human glaucoma. And third, it reversed vision loss in aging animals without glaucoma.

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Reversal of Biological Clock Restores Vision In Old Mice

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  • Quite Amazing. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Friday December 04, 2020 @06:20AM (#60793076)

    Wow. This really is quite amazing that they've done this, even in mice.

    I know someone who went blind after falling into a diabetic coma. Extremely unfortunate, but I wonder if this would show considerable promise, even in cases like that. Even if the solutions were a few more years away, it would still be something to look forward to.

    • Jeez, haw bad was his diet??
      I'm sorry for your buddy, but I'd bet money this could be seen and prevented, *decades* before. Even in the way his parents behaved. :/ I hope he gets better. ... And learned from it!!

      • Jeez, haw bad was his diet??

        Let's just say he challenged himself often metabolizing ethanol. Doesn't mix well. At all.

        I'm sorry for your buddy, but I'd bet money this could be seen and prevented, *decades* before. Even in the way his parents behaved. :/ I hope he gets better. ... And learned from it!!

        Tried multiple times to help him. Learned? Yes, he sadly has. The hard way. But the fact that he has, gives me hope this will help him one day.

        • Let's just say he challenged himself often metabolizing ethanol. Doesn't mix well. At all.

          Now there's the medical breakthrough we're really waiting for; making the liver young again.

  • ... merely the result of decades of eating bad things for food.

    As none of those diseases exist in aboriginal peoples that haven't seen food from a factory yet. (See table 1 [nih.gov].)

    So for such diseases, this can merely be a crutch until we finally get poisoning^Wfeeding billions of people right.
    (Hey, you can do it today. Unless you are working poor and can't afford to grow crops, raise livestock, and not eat basically white powders in various textures and forms.)

  • This is good news. Does this mean humans can now travel millions of light-years and conquer new habitable planets? Ok over population could be the downside, but this also means humans would be able to travel unlimited distances.
    • "This is good news. Does this mean humans can now travel millions of light-years and conquer new habitable planets? "

      No, it means that the universe will be populated by old mice.

    • Uh, you do realize that our galaxy, Milky Way, is only perhaps 70,000 light years across?
      Why would we have to travel to the ends of the Universe to find new, habitable planets?

      (Of course, why bring science into it?)
      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        Because when you get down to the core of it, we really don't have any idea just how common or rare actually habitable planets actually are.

        Okay,there are hundreds of billions of worlds in our galaxy alone. and trillions of galaxies

        But this number is finite.

        And the universe is finitely old.

        We have no objectively justifiable basis to presume that our existence here was the result of statistically unlikely events that are so small in reality that they could otherwise fall within a margin of error to r

  • I guess we have to change the lyrics to the nursery thyme. But "Three formerly-blind mice" doesn't quite have the same ring to it.

  • This is going to screw up my retirement plans. I've already saved $100 and now if I live longer I'm going to need to save even more.
  • by kbahey ( 102895 ) on Friday December 04, 2020 @12:19PM (#60794156) Homepage

    The Adeno-associated viruses are already used in FDA approved gene therapy for certain hereditary blindness. Lookup Luxterna. It costs ~ $900,00, and worth it for those afflicted.

    Contrary to the current adenovirus vectors used in COVID-19 vaccines (e.g. Oxford/AstraZeneca, Janssen/JnJ, CanSinoBio, Sputnik V), the AAV DNA strand persists in the nucleus of infected cells (but does not integrated into chromosomes).

    Source: Dr. Vincent Racaniello Virology course at Columbia University, available on Youtube.

  • Wanted: Java developer with 100 years of experience. Next year.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by malkavian ( 9512 )

      You realise that's complete rubbish? The young are not held hostage; they're simply shown what doesn't work, and what does.
      In places that this bit fails, and the young get all the say, then there's lots of aggressive shouting, polarisation, and generally very little stability.
      Like everything else, there's a good equilibrium to be found, enough stability to provide a framework to leap from, and enough disruption to push for the new.

  • It would be great if they could reverse hair loss...

    ...and hair growing in other places where it shouldn't. Yeah, the joys of getting older.

  • Looking at the metrics in healthcare at the moment, increasingly, the larger bulk of the funding is going towards gerontology related issues.
    This is because we've become so good at keeping people alive that they get old enough to simply start failing due to age, and we have the technology to patch some of that up too, until something critical, or just too much failure occurs.

    Having the ability to rejuvenate aspects of the body may not grant huge extensions in life (we're quite a way from that yet), but if i

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