I am not sure I want to live that long...

Cheeni

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/11/051117181327.htm

Deleting 'Anti-Aging' Gene From Yeast Greatly Lengthens Life Span

A counterintuitive experiment has resulted in one of the longest
recorded life-span extensions in any organism and opened a new door
for anti-aging research in humans.

Scientists have known for several years that an extra copy of the SIR2
gene can promote longevity in yeast, worms and fruit flies.

That finding was covered widely and incorporated into anti-aging drug
development programs at several biotechnology companies.

Now, molecular geneticists at the University of Southern California
suggest that SIR2 instead promotes aging.

Their study, "Sir2 Blocks Extreme Life-Span Extension," appears in the
Nov. 18 edition of the biology journal Cell. The lead author is Valter
Longo, assistant professor in the Leonard Davis School of Gerontology
and the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

Rather than adding copies of SIR2 to yeast, Longo's research group
deleted the gene altogether.

The result was a dramatically extended life span - up to six times
longer than normal - when the SIR2 deletion was combined with caloric
restriction and/or a mutation in one or two genes, RAS2 and SCH9, that
control the storage of nutrients and resistance to cell damage.

Human cells with reduced SIR2 activity also appear to confirm that
SIR2 has a pro-aging effect, Longo said, although those results are
not included in the Cell paper.

Since all mammals share key aging-related genes, the paper points to a
new direction for human anti-aging research.

Longo proposes that SIR2 and possibly its counterpart in mammals,
SIRT1, may block the organism from entering an extreme survival mode
characterized by the absence of reproduction, improved DNA repair and
increased protection against cell damage. Organisms usually enter this
mode in response to starvation.

The long-lived organisms in Longo's experiment showed extraordinary
resilience under stress.

"We hit them with oxidants, we hit them with heat," Longo said. "They
are highly resistant to everything. What they're doing is basically
saying, 'I cannot afford to age. I still have to generate offspring,
but I don't have enough food to do it now."

Longo predicted that as molecular geneticists master the levers of
aging, they will be able to design drugs that coax the body into
entering chosen aspects of a starvation-response mode, such as stress
resistance, even when food is plentiful.

If enough food is available, an organism might be programmed both to
reproduce normally and to maximize its survival systems.

Longo urged caution in extrapolating the result to humans.

"We have been very successful with simple organisms," he said.
"Naturally, mammals are complex, and it will be a great challenge to
get major life-span extension."

A "really exciting" implication, Longo said, is that cells may be able
to speed up their DNA repair efforts. All organisms have the ability
to repair harmful mutations in their DNA, whether caused by age,
radiation, diet or other environmental factors. Cancer often begins
when DNA mutations outstrip a cell's ability to remain differentiated.

Many researchers believe DNA repair systems are already running flat
out. The organisms in Longo's experiment say otherwise.

"In our paper, we show that age-dependent mutations increase at a much
slower pace in organisms lacking RAS2 or SCH9 and at a remarkably low
pace in organisms lacking both SCH9 and SIR2, raising the possibility
that the mutations that cause human cancers can be delayed or
prevented," Longo said.

"Notably, mutations that increase the activity of human homologs of
the yeast SCH9 and RAS2 genes play central roles in many human
cancers." Homologs are genes descended from a common ancestral DNA
sequence.

Joining with researchers at the USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer
Center, Longo is studying the feasibility of reducing or preventing
the age-dependent DNA mutations that cause cancer.

Longo and his collaborators began studying SIR2 in 2000, soon after a
well-known set of experiments by Leonard Guarente at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. Guarente was the first to show that
over-expression of the SIR2 gene could extend life span beyond its
natural limit.

However, Longo said, "We were convinced that SIR2 had the potential to
be a more potent pro-aging than an anti-aging gene. And the reason was
in part because of the similarity with this other gene, called HST1,
which negatively regulated so-called protective genes. So we set out
to test whether SIR2 could do the opposite of what everybody said it
does."

The researchers do not quarrel with Guarente's finding of a moderate
increase in life span when SIR2 is over-expressed. But their work
shows that much greater potential gains lie in the opposite direction.

###

Longo's co-author was USC research scientist Paola Fabrizio. The other
USC authors were Cristina Gattazzo, Luisa Battistella, Min Wei, Chao
Cheng and Kristen McGrew.

Funding for this research came from the American Federation for Aging
Research and from the National Institute of Aging of the National
Institutes of Health.

Editor's Note: The original news release can be found here.

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