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Biotech

Biotech Startup Says Mice Live Longer After Genetic Reprogramming (technologyreview.com) 30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from MIT Technology Review: A small biotech company claims it has used a technology called reprogramming to rejuvenate old mice and extend their lives, a result suggesting that one day older people could have their biological clocks turned back with an injection -- literally becoming younger. The life-extension claim in rodents, made by Rejuvenate Bio, a San Diego biotech company, appears in a preprint paper on the website BioRxiv and hasn't been peer reviewed.

Noah Davidsohn, chief scientific officer of Rejuvenate, says the company used gene therapy to add three powerful reprogramming genes to the bodies of mice that were equivalent in age to human 77-year-olds. After the treatment, their remaining life span was doubled, the company says. Treated mice lived another 18 weeks, on average, while control mice died in nine weeks. Overall, the treated mice lived about 7% longer. Although the increase in lifespan was modest, the company says the research provides a demonstration of age reversal in an animal. "This is a powerful technology, and here is the proof of concept," says Davidsohn. "I wanted to show that it's actually something we can do in our elderly population."

Scientists not connected to the company called the study an exciting landmark but cautioned that whole-body rejuvenation using gene therapy remains a poorly understood concept with huge risks. "It's a beautiful intellectual exercise, but I would shy away from doing anything remotely similar to a person," says Vittorio Sebastiano, a professor at Stanford University. One risk is that the powerful programming process can cause cancer. Such an effect is often seen in mice. Even so, the chance that reprogramming could be an elixir of youth has led to a research and investment boom. One company, Altos Labs, says it has raised over $3 billion.
"Far more information will be needed to learn exactly what changes the reprogramming genes cause in the mice, and researchers say other groups will need to repeat the experiment before they are convinced," adds the report.

"Sebastiano says the life-extension effect reported by Rejuvenate could be due to changes in a single organ or group of cells, rather than a general mouse-wide rejuvenation effect. Among other shortfalls in its research, Rejuvenate did not carefully document which and how many cells were changed by the genetic treatment."
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Biotech Startup Says Mice Live Longer After Genetic Reprogramming

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  • ...I need to see what Elizabeth Holmes has to say about this!

    • Re:Hold on... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Canberra1 ( 3475749 ) on Tuesday January 10, 2023 @01:01AM (#63194476)
      See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] There is a list of life extending drugs and smart drugs to sharpen memory etc. You can live longer by eating less. You can live longer by exercise. You can live longer by not doing smoking/alcohol and drugs. Start by correcting vitamin deficiencies like B12, Vit D. Recent issues like Phone and social media addiction, stress of unaffordable housing, insecure work, microplastics, methyl in water - shorten your lifespan. The most important knowledge is saving enough after retirement to death - assume about 88yo if you like in a wealthy country. Women can add some extra years. However 80+ people who are not highly mobile and overweight, prone to nursing homes. Less for bread and sugar sweettooths. The very old Japanese, do not use mobiles - they walk to their friends to talk. Summary: Walk, drink lots of plain water as a start.
      • Like you said, Asian cultures seem to live really long but it seems not all factors are equal. Water, walking, and diet seem to be the most important. Asian cultures can have a high prevalence of smoking and social drinking.

        Likewise, some of us have that relative that smoked till the day they died and still made it over 90. But for that 1, there are probably 10 who got cancer. The genetics of disease and a hereditary component, is definitely an area we should better understand if not to change genes, at lea

  • ... we completed work on the better mouse trap.

  • This is all completely moot if the global community does not band together and stop drastic climate change. The computer predictions of humanities end sure seem like they will be close; this may all be over by 2150, that's how bad humanity is currently screwing up. https://www.theguardian.com/en... [theguardian.com]
  • by GoJays ( 1793832 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @11:29PM (#63194364)

    Open it up for humans. The first people to try it will be all the narcissist's and people with way to much money they don't know what to do with... Think of all the cosmetic surgery monsters in Hollywood lining up to get their injections... images of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade come to mind. "She chose poorly."

    The world might actually be a better place because of it.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by jddj ( 1085169 ) on Tuesday January 10, 2023 @12:19AM (#63194424) Journal

    Mice also live longer when you stop cutting them open to see what's inside.

    Film at 11.

  • "Congratulations, your lifespan has been increased to within [MARGIN OF ERROR]. You may or may not have cancer, and slash or, extra fingers."
  • by Wizardess ( 888790 ) on Tuesday January 10, 2023 @01:06AM (#63194480)

    The results of the study are interesting, most interesting to somebody whose story is just about completely written. Rather than looking at only how much longer the mice lived how about also looking at how the mice died. Did they die of heart problems, advanced feebleness, cancer, or other things. That may give a clue for what to watch for when studying it in humans.

    Meanwhile, gimme some. I have little to lose at this point.

    {^_^}

  • by Walt Dismal ( 534799 ) on Tuesday January 10, 2023 @01:47AM (#63194492)
    The last thing we need is 1000 year old mice. Disney, get out of here.
  • Small startup gives hopes of extended (eternal) life, but sparse on detail.
  • Oh, great, longer living rodents : P
  • Most of them Hollywood actresses.

  • Maybe this has existed longer than we thought? That might explain Mickey's longevity...

  • No thanks, I most certainly do not want to live *longer*. What I want is for my knee and shoulder and back to not hurt every second until I die. Longer would just be worse if you have to deal with the extended wear and tear on the body over time. Imagine getting this therapy at say, 60, and then breaking a hip and living with the pain another 50 years. Imagine getting this therapy at 20 as a young narcissist, then crippling yourself in a motorcycle crash the next week and having another 100 years to suffer
    • If life extension becomes immortality? I can almost guarantee you'll see nation-states the world over changing their tune about suicide. Right now they need us to live productive enough lives to wring enough dollars out of us to make it worth tolerating our existence. If we live forever? You can be damned sure they'll want a nice, easy way out for those that are no longer considered "productive." The suffering will mean jack-all to the decision makers if it isn't their own, but the ability to check-out on a

    • by tragedy ( 27079 )

      Treatments like this may or may not help with physical damage to the body. One of the things about healing is that a significant part of it is done by gluing things back together with scar tissue, which can work surprisingly well, but, while there are other healing mechanisms, most things healed with scar tissue stay stuck together with scar tissue for the rest of your life. Which can end up being problematic since scar tissue has to be maintained. That's one of the reasons vitamin C is so important. Your s

      • Yeah, the scar tissue thing is really interesting. I wonder if there is much research and progress into getting the body to rebuild injuries with normal tissue rather than scar tissue. I also wonder if it does in fact do so, abet very slowly. I have various scars from childhood mishaps, that I can barely locate anymore as they have faded and blended in with the surrounding skin. I’m not willing to give myself scurvy to see if they open back up though, to many other more recent and serious injuries to
  • Not being young any more, I'm resigned to the likelihood this will be perfected for humans the day after I die...

  • As I understand it, we already live several times as long as an animal of our size and metabolic rate should. Isaac Asimov wrote an essay, "The Slowly Moving Finger," which plotted lifespan against metabolic rate for various animals and found that humans were far off the curve. I wonder if whatever this technique does for mice has already been done for us, long ago, by evolution.

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