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Medical Forum / General / Alternative / January 2008

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Ten-Fold Lifespan Increase Achieved in Yeast

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Dave - 14 Jan 2008 14:39 GMT
Anyone who reads about the booming research field of life extension
would be interested in this one. Here's yet another proof that calorie
restriction works . . . A new study in PLOS Genetics shows that
biologists have achieved a 10-fold life span extension in ordinary
baker's yeast. This new discovery provides insight into aging
mechanisms shared with humans and other mammals and will really set
the stage for more R&D in the anti-aging market.

Biologists have created baker's yeast capable of living to 800 in
yeast years without apparent side effects. This important discovery,
achieved through a combination of dietary and genetic changes, brings
science closer to controlling the survival and health of the unit of
all living systems: the cell.

"We're setting the foundation for reprogramming healthy life," said
study leader Valter Longo of the University of Southern California.

A companion study, showing that the same genetic changes in yeast
reverse the course of an accelerated aging syndrome, appears in the
Jan. 14 issue of the Journal of Cell Biology. This research team put
baker's yeast on a calorie-restricted diet and knocked out two genes,
RAS2 and SCH9, that promote aging in yeast and cancer in humans.

"We got a 10-fold life span extension that is, I think, the longest
one that has ever been achieved in any organism," Longo said. In 2005,
the same research group reported a five-fold life span extension in
the journal Cell. Normal yeast organisms live about a week.

"I would say 10-fold is pretty significant," said Anna McCormick,
chief of the genetics and cell biology branch at the National
Institute on Aging and Longo's program officer.

The NIA funds such research in the hope of extending healthy life span
in humans through the development of drugs that mimic the life-
prolonging techniques used by Longo and others, McCormick added.

Baker's yeast is one of the most studied and best understood organisms
at the molecular and genetic level. Remarkably in light of its
simplicity, yeast has led to the discovery of some of the most
important genes and pathways regulating aging and disease in mice and
other mammals.

Calorie restriction - in practice, controlled starvation - has long
been shown to reduce disease and extend life span in species from
yeast to mice.

Scientists believe that a nutrient shortage kicks organisms into a
maintenance mode, enabling them to re-direct energy from growth and
reproduction into anti-aging systems until the time they can feed and
breed again. Calorie restriction is now being tested by other
researchers on primates and even humans.

Dave

Full text article above extracted from http://shamvswham.blogspot.com/
drceephd@insightbb.com - 14 Jan 2008 15:53 GMT
> Dave
>
> Full text article above extracted fromhttp://shamvswham.blogspot.com/

Bechamp was able to culture and grow organisms from chalk that was
thought to be 60 million years old.  How 'bout that for a lifespan?
These little beasties appeared to him to be "immortal."

DrCee
David Wright - 14 Jan 2008 18:10 GMT
>> Dave
>>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>thought to be 60 million years old.  How 'bout that for a lifespan?
>These little beasties appeared to him to be "immortal."

How 'bout that for improper lab technique?  No way DNA would last
intact for 60 million years.

 -- David Wright :: alphabeta at prodigy.net
    These are my opinions only, but they're almost always correct.
    "Without Bush, what will America's schoolchildren have to look down on?"
                                                       -- Bill Maher
 
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