Finding a way to stop the ageing process has been an elusive, age-old dream. Now scientists from Australia and the US believe they have not only found a way to press pause – but to rewind the ageing process as well.
While the study was conducted using
mice, molecular biologist David Sinclair from the University of New South Wales
and Harvard University said the findings were significant and could have
implications for the treatment of age-related diseases such as cancer and type
2 diabetes.
The research team discovered a key
mechanism that keeps the body's cells communicating. In youth, communication
inside individual cells – between the cell's "battery" known as the
mitochondrion and the nucleus – is fast and frequent. But over time, this slows
and ageing accelerates.
"The ageing process we
discovered is like a married couple – when they are young, they communicate
well. But over time, living in close quarters for many years, communication
breaks down," Professor Sinclair said. "And just like a couple,
restoring communication solved the problem."
In the study, the Sydney researchers
used mice that are considered equivalent to a 60-year-old human and older
mice, equating to a 90-year-old human. A control group of mice were fed a
calorie-restricted diet.
The results, outlined in the
scientific journal Cell on Friday, were better for the younger mice, which
were able to rewind the ageing process within a week. The treatment effectively
transformed a 60-year-old into a 20-year-old on some measures, including the
degree of muscle wastage, insulin resistance and inflammation.
"If the compound is
administered early enough in the ageing process, in just a week, the muscles of
the older mice were indistinguishable from the younger animals," said
co-author Nigel Turner from UNSW's pharmacology department.
The older mice showed some
improvement, but it was not as dramatic.
"It may be in the future that
your age in years isn't going to matter as much as your biological age,"
Professor Sinclair said.
"What we've shown here is that
you can turn back your biological age, or at least we think we have found a way
to do that."
He said seeing results so quickly
came as "a complete shock".
Professor Sinclair said he hoped to
start human trials next year.
0 comments:
Post a Comment