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Scientists are one step closer to delaying aging


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Scientists are one step closer to delaying aging

Getting old is inevitable, but scientists at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) may be one step closer to being able to delay the aging process.


A team of scientists studied aging in yeast -- chosen because its cells are easily manipulated -- to try to understand if different cells age at the same rate, and for the same reason.

 

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However, the other half aged because of a dysfunction of mitochondria, which produce a cell's energy.
 
Scientists said that the cells go down one of two paths -- nuclear or mitochondrial -- early in life, and they continue with the aging route until they ultimately decline and die.
 
Researchers performed further tests to understand how the cells behaved.
 
"To understand how cells make these decisions, we identified the molecular processes underlying each aging route and the connections among them, revealing a molecular circuit that controls cell
 
aging, analogous to electric circuits that control home appliances," said Nan Hao, senior author of the study and an associate professor in UCSD's division of biological sciences' molecular biology
 
section.
 
After modeling the "aging landscape," the team of researchers found they could manipulate -- and optimize -- the process of aging, using computer simulations to reprogram the master circuit and
 
modify its DNA.
 
They were then able to create a "novel aging route," with a dramatically extended lifespan. This, researchers believe, could ultimately lead to the possibility of delaying human aging.
 
"This is an aging path that never existed, but because we understand how it is regulated, we can basically design or regulate a new aging path," Hao told CNN.
 
"Our study raises the possibility of rationally designing gene or chemical-based therapies to reprogram how human cells age, with a goal of effectively delaying human aging and extending human
 
healthspan," Hao said in a statement.
 
Scientists said that they plan to test their model in complex cells, organisms, and eventually, humans, as well as testing how combinations of therapeutics and drugs could lead to further longevity.
 
"Aging is a fundamental biological question. We know very little about the aging process," Hao told CNN. When it comes to medical relevance, he said, "aging is related to many diseases so if we
 
can help slow aging or promote longevity, it will be beneficial for society.
 
 
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