Scientists: Enzyme May Have Fountain of Youth Effect
Transcription
Scientists: Enzyme May Have Fountain of Youth Effect
FOXNews.com - Scientists: Enzyme May Have Fountain of You... http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,455965,... Scientists: Enzyme May Have Fountain of Youth Effect Friday , November 21, 2008 Scientists at the Spanish National Cancer Center in Madrid, Spain, think that by boosting a certain enzyme naturally created in the body, a person could live a longer life, London’s Daily Telegraph reported. ADVERTISEMENT Scientists say the finding may one day pave the way to create a product that would have a fountain of youth effect. As the body ages, cells divide, leading the protective caps on the ends of chromosomes to become shorter and ragged. Eventually, the cell dies. But increasing the amount of the enzyme telomerase appears to rejuvenate the protective caps, thus keeping them from unraveling. Maria Blasco, who led the team of researchers, told New Scientist the enzymes were capable of “turning a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell.” The team genetically engineered mice to produce 10 times the amount of telomerase that a body normally has. They found the mice lived 50 percent longer than usual. The mice also had an increased tolerance for glucose and less subcutaneous fat. The downside to increasing the amounts of telomerase in the body is that it can increase the risk of developing cancer. Blasco said she believes cancer drugs would negate this side effect, however. Click here to read more from the Daily Telegraph. SEARCH GO Click here for FOX News RSS Feeds Advertise on FOX News Channel, FOXNews.com and FOX News Radio Jobs at FOX News Channel. Internships At Fox News (Summer Application Deadline is March 15, 2007) Terms of use. Privacy Statement. For FOXNews.com comments write to foxnewsonline@foxnews.com; For FOX News Channel comments write to comments@foxnews.com © Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Copyright 2008 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. All market data delayed 20 minutes. 1 of 1 24/11/08 09:41 International news and exclusives This Thisweek– week– A small step closer to eternal youth linda geddes COULD artificially raising levels of a key enzyme hold back the effects of ageing? It has long been a hope but now two lab experiments – one with human cells and one in animals – are providing the first evidence that this may actually be possible. The enzyme in question is telomerase, which is present naturally in some mammalian cells. Its function is to maintain the protective caps called telomeres at the ends of our chromosomes, which unravel with each cell division as we get older. It has been suggested that this shortening triggers some of the negative effects of ageing at a cellular level. As a result, telomerase has been hailed by some as a potential elixir of life. One of the latest studies confirms that at least one type of human cell can indeed be restored to a youthful state by boosting telomerase levels. The other suggests that boosting telomerase can result in longer life in animals. While an elixir of life in people remains a very long way off, the prospect of boosting telomerase to fight disease, including age-related diseases, may be much closer. With the aim of fighting HIV, immunologist Rita Effros at the University of California, Los Angeles, previously inserted part of the telomerase gene into immune cells called killer T-cells. While this did indeed boost their ability to fight viral infections, such gene therapy is considered too dangerous to be used in practice. So in her latest experiments, Effros has turned to a drug called TAT2, developed by Geron of | NewScientist | 22 November 2008 Menlo Park, California, that boosts telomerase production without altering anyone’s DNA. When killer T-cells from people with HIV were exposed to TAT2, it enhanced the cells’ ability to fight the virus, suggesting that TAT2 might be used to supplement existing anti-retroviral drugs by boosting the immune systems of people with HIV (The Journal of Immunology, vol 181, p 7400). This idea is supported by a previous study which indicated that some people with HIV who go for years without developing AIDS have killer T-cells with high telomerase activity and longer telomeres. Since T-cells fight many viruses, TAT2 might eventually be deployed to boost resistance to a whole range of diseases. TAT2 also increased the cells’ ability to divide and stopped their telomeres from shortening, which raises the possibility that it might be used to wind back the clock of other ageing cells and provide more general treatments for ageing. Aubrey de Grey of the Virginiabased Methuselah Foundation, “We’re getting the best of both worlds – allowing cell division to happen when we need it but not to happen when we don’t” which promotes research into extending lifespan, certainly sees the study as a big step in that direction. “It is what we would have hoped,” he says. He is particularly interested in the fact that the cells seemed to be “fully functional” in their new role as youthful immune cells, raising hopes that telomerase murray close/lucasfilm/bfi At last there are signs that we may be able to keep our cells young without producing intolerable side effects might wind back the cellular clock more generally. Some safety concerns remain, however, not least because cancer cells produce telomerase at higher than normal rates. “With anything that boosts telomerase, you may have unwanted cell growth like in cancers,” says Arne Akbar, an immunologist at University College London. However, when TAT2 was added to tumour cells it did not affect the amount of telomerase they produced. Nor did it change the growth characteristics of immune cells that were cultured with a virus that can trigger cancer. “We are fairly confident at this point that TAT2 won’t enhance cancer development,” says Effros, although further trials are needed to confirm this. Telomerase is extracted from the Astragalus plant, which is used in Chinese medicine without any obvious adverse effects. While this may help pave the way to pilot studies in humans in the near future, Effros warns against taking large doses of Astragalus to try and mimic the TAT2 effect. “Uncontrolled use of any herbal drug is not wise and I would not advocate it,” she says. Even if telomerase proves successful at holding back some of the effects of ageing at a cellular level, it is still a big jump from there to something that stops a person as a whole from ageing. Yet this prospect too has been brought a step closer with an announcement last week from Maria Blasco at the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid and her colleagues. Telomerase has previously been shown capable of turning “a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell”, as Blasco puts it. But whether this translates into www.newscientist.com In this section ● Chatty macaques provide language clue, page 11 ● Legacy of the Mars Phoenix lander, page 12 ● How living things caused a mineral explosion, page 14 Bush’s last chance to leave a green legacy delaying ageing in live mammals has previously been difficult to test, as high levels of telomerase tend to promote cancer, which shortens their lives. So Blasco’s team bred mice engineered to be resistant to cancer with mice engineered to produce 10 times the normal levels of telomerase in epithelial tissue, which lines the cavities and surfaces of the body. These animals lived up to 50 per cent longer than normal mice (Cell, DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2008.09.034). “You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan,” says Blasco. Blasco’s mice also had less subcutaneous fat, healthier epithelial tissue and improved neuromuscular coordination and glucose tolerance, which are all signs of youth. Boosting telomerase also seemed to have beneficial effects on the www.newscientist.com ONE of the George W. Bush’s final acts as US president could be to create the largest marine conservation area in the world. White House officials say that Bush is considering a proposal to turn up to 2.3 million square kilometres of tropical waters, coral reefs and remote island atolls in the Pacific Ocean into US National Monuments (see map). “As bad as his environmental record has been, he could, as one individual, protect more of the Earth’s surface than anyone else in history,” says Lance Morgan of the US Marine Conservation Biology Institute. Under the American Antiquities Act of 1906, a president does not need congressional approval to preserve public land or water for conservation as a National Monument. In 2006, Bush used the act to designate a 365,000 square kilometre Marine National Monument incorporating the northernmost islands of Hawaii, creating the –Only Indy can keep death at bay – so far– world’s largest protected marine area. In late August this year, he animals’ brains and muscles, announced his interest in conserving even though the enzyme was additional areas of the Pacific Ocean. not expressed in these tissues. The US claims jurisdiction over a Effros warns against number of small islands and atolls concluding that this means we can across the Pacific, including American prevent ageing in humans. “I think Samoa, Wake Island and the it is very hard to extrapolate data Northern Mariana Islands. For every from mouse ageing to human sand spit and coral reef jutting above the water line, the US retains exclusive rights to the surrounding waters for 370 kilometres in all directions. It is in these areas that Morgan has been working with the White House on a deal to secure permanent “no-take zones” for fishing and mineral extraction. This also includes the Mariana trench, the planet’s deepest ocean canyon. Island leaders have protested the plan, citing the economic loss it represents if marine resources are declared off limits. So far this has not deterred White House officials. “It’s not a foregone conclusion that we’ll have monuments, but it’s a distinct possibility,” says James Connaughton, who chairs the White House Council on Environmental Quality. According to Connaughton, Bush may conserve smaller areas immediately surrounding reefs and other biologically rich areas, leaving the remaining seafloor available for possible future mining. Morgan is urging White House officials to conserve the full 370-kilometre zone surrounding the islands to give fragile coral ecosystems the best chance of survival. “When we’ve set aside areas in the past, we’ve often realised later they were too small to eliminate interference from outside human activities,” he says. Phil McKenna l ageing,” she says. In particular, she points out that all mice have longer telomeres than humans, and the lab mice are bred in sterile conditions. Blasco, however, is optimistic that a similar approach may eventually extend human lifespans. She suggests that the treatment could be combined with cancer drugs to offset any enhanced cancer risk. “We’re learning to control cell division in a manner that gets the best of both worlds,” says de Grey, “allowing it to happen when we need it, and not to happen when we don’t.” l 22 November 2008 | NewScientist | Enzyme takes us a step closer to eternal youth - 19 November 2... http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20026833.700-enzyme-... Home | News | Back to article Enzyme takes us a step closer to eternal youth 19 November 2008 by Linda Geddes Magazine issue 2683. Subscribe and get 4 free issues. For similar stories, visit the Death Topic Guide ADVERTISEMENT COULD artificially raising levels of a key enzyme hold back the effects of ageing? It has long been a hope but now two lab experiments - one with human cells and one in animals - are providing the first evidence that this may actually be possible. The enzyme in question is telomerase, which is present naturally in some mammalian cells. Its function is to maintain the protective caps called telomeres at the ends of our chromosomes, which unravel with each cell division as we get older. It has been suggested that this shortening triggers some of the negative effects of ageing at a cellular level. As a result, telomerase has been hailed by some as a potential elixir of life. One of the latest studies confirms that at least one type of human cell can indeed be restored to a youthful state by boosting telomerase levels. The other suggests that boosting telomerase can result in longer life in animals. While an elixir of life in people remains a very long way off, the prospect of boosting telomerase to fight disease, including age-related diseases, may be much closer. With the aim of fighting HIV, immunologist Rita Effros at the University of California, Los Angeles, previously inserted part of the telomerase gene into immune cells called killer T-cells. While this did indeed boost their ability to fight viral infections, such gene therapy is considered too dangerous to be used in practice. So in her latest experiments, Effros has turned to a drug called TAT2, developed by Geron of Menlo Park, California, that boosts telomerase production without altering anyone's DNA. When killer T-cells from people with HIV were exposed to TAT2, it enhanced the cells' ability to fight the virus, suggesting that TAT2 might be used to supplement existing anti-retroviral drugs by boosting the immune systems of people with HIV (The Journal of Immunology, vol 181, p 7400). This idea is supported by a previous study which indicated that some people with HIV who go for years without developing AIDS have killer T-cells with high telomerase activity and longer telomeres. Since T-cells fight many viruses, TAT2 might eventually be deployed to boost resistance to a whole range of diseases. TAT2 also increased the cells' ability to divide and stopped their telomeres from shortening, which raises the possibility that it might be used to wind back the clock of other ageing cells and provide more general treatments for ageing. Aubrey de Grey of the Virginia-based Methuselah Foundation, which promotes research into extending lifespan, certainly sees the study as a big step in that direction. "It is what we would have hoped," he says. He is particularly interested in the fact that the cells seemed to be "fully functional" in their new role as youthful immune cells, raising hopes that telomerase might wind back the cellular clock more generally. Some safety concerns remain, however, not least because cancer cells produce telomerase at higher than normal rates. "With anything that boosts telomerase, you may have unwanted cell growth like in cancers," says Arne Akbar, an immunologist at University College London. However, when TAT2 was added to tumour cells it did not affect the amount of telomerase they produced. Nor did it change the growth characteristics of immune cells that were cultured with a virus that can trigger cancer. "We are fairly confident at this point that TAT2 won't enhance cancer 1 of 3 21/11/08 09:55 Enzyme takes us a step closer to eternal youth - 19 November 2... http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20026833.700-enzyme-... development," says Effros, although further trials are needed to confirm this. Telomerase is extracted from the Astragalus plant, which is used in Chinese medicine without any obvious adverse effects. While this may help pave the way to pilot studies in humans in the near future, Effros warns against taking large doses of Astragalus to try and mimic the TAT2 effect. "Uncontrolled use of any herbal drug is not wise and I would not advocate it," she says. Even if telomerase proves successful at holding back some of the effects of ageing at a cellular level, it is still a big jump from there to something that stops a person as a whole from ageing. Yet this prospect too has been brought a step closer with an announcement last week from Maria Blasco at the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid and her colleagues. Telomerase has previously been shown capable of turning "a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell", as Blasco puts it. But whether this translates into delaying ageing in live mammals has previously been difficult to test, as high levels of telomerase tend to promote cancer, which shortens their lives. So Blasco's team bred mice engineered to be resistant to cancer with mice engineered to produce 10 times the normal levels of telomerase in epithelial tissue, which lines the cavities and surfaces of the body. These animals lived up to 50 per cent longer than normal mice (Cell, DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2008.09.034). "You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan," says Blasco. Blasco's mice also had less subcutaneous fat, healthier epithelial tissue and improved neuromuscular coordination and glucose tolerance, which are all signs of youth. Boosting telomerase also seemed to have beneficial effects on the animals' brains and muscles, even though the enzyme was not expressed in these tissues. Effros warns against concluding that this means we can prevent ageing in humans. "I think it is very hard to extrapolate data from mouse ageing to human ageing," she says. In particular, she points out that all mice have longer telomeres than humans, and the lab mice are bred in sterile conditions. Blasco, however, is optimistic that a similar approach may eventually extend human lifespans. She suggests that the treatment could be combined with cancer drugs to offset any enhanced cancer risk. "We're learning to control cell division in a manner that gets the best of both worlds," says de Grey, "allowing it to happen when we need it, and not to happen when we don't." We're getting the best of both worlds - allowing cell division to happen when we need it but not to happen when we don't From issue 2683 of New Scientist magazine, page 8-9. Subscribe and get 4 free issues. Browse past issues of New Scientist magazine If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to. Back to article PRINT SEND ADVERTISEMENT 2 of 3 21/11/08 09:55 Scientists take a step closer to an elixir of youth - Telegraph http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/3489881/Scientist... W Scientists take a step closer to an elixir of youth A naturally occuring substance that can create "immortal cells" could be the key to finding a real elixir of youth, scientists claim. By Richard Alleyne, Science Correspondent Last Updated: 4:44PM GMT 20 Nov 2008 Researchers believe boosting the amount of a naturally forming enzyme in the body could prevent cells dying and so lead to extended, healthier, lifespans.. The protein telomerase helps maintain the protective caps at the ends of chromosomes which act like the ends of shoelaces and stop them unravelling. As we age, and our cells divide, these caps become frayed and shorter and eventually are so damaged that the cell dies. Scientists believe boosting our natural levels of telomerase could rejuvenate them. A team at the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid tested the theory on mice and found that those genetically engineered to produce 10 times the normal levels of telomerase lived 50 per cent longer than normal. Maria Blasco, who led the research, told the New Scientist said that the enzyme was capable of turning "a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell". She added that she was optimistic that a similar approach may eventually lead to extended human lifespans though she urged caution. "You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan," she said. "(But)I think it is very hard to extrapolate data from mouse ageing to human ageing." One of the problems with boosting telomerase is that it can increase the risk of cancer. Dr Blasco said this could be overcome by also issuing cancer drugs that could offset the negative affects. She said that the mice with the boosted enzyme also saw other health benefits - often associated with youth such as less subcutaneous fat and better glucose tolerance. Related Content More on Health News (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/) Back to top 1 of 2 21/11/08 09:49 'Supermice' who can resist cancer and age almost half as fast as normal - Telegraph Página 1 de 2 W 'Supermice' who can resist cancer and age almost half as fast as normal Scientists have created "supermice" capable of resisting cancer and which age almost half as fast as other mice. By Kate Devlin, Medical Correspondent Last Updated: 10:14PM GMT 13 Nov 2008 If their powers were mirrored in humans it would create an average lifespan of 120 years, the researchers claim. Scientists first modified the genes of the mice to make them resistant to cancer. In addition, they genetically increased the amount of a particular protein in the body, which can delay how quickly cells age. The resulting mice age 40 per cent slower than those whose genes have not been modified, studies show. Scientists have known since the 1990s of the age-defying powers of the protein, called telomerase. The protein helps cells to regenerate, allowing them to stay younger for longer. However, previous attempts to increase the amount of the protein in mice ended in failure when scientists found that it made them more susceptible to developing cancer. In the latest study, published in the journal Cell, the scientists solved that problem by changing the genes of the mice first to make them resistant to the disease. The researchers found that mice which had been created in this way had better muscle in old age, healthier skin tissue and fewer digestion problems. "By simultaneously increasing the amounts of telomerase and the resistance to cancer we are able to delay ageing in mice and also to extend their life span by 40 per cent," said Maria A. Blasco, from the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), who carried out the study with colleagues from Valencia University. "These mice get to live for as long as the eldest mice in records of the same kind. "If we were to parallel it to humans, then it would mean reaching 120 years of age and also to start ageing much later in life." She believes that the findings will be of interest to the beauty industry, which is already looking at the potential of using telemorase to fight the effects of aging. Last year scientists at the University of Kentucky announced that they had been able to create a mouse resistant to cancer, even highly-aggressive types, using a tumour-suppressor gene called "Par-4" in the prostate. At the time they claimed that the breakthrough could be used to create bone marrow transplantation which could http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scienceandtechnology/science/sciencenews/3454467/Supermi... 14/11/2008 'Supermice' who can resist cancer and age almost half as fast as normal - Telegraph Página 2 de 2 be used to fight cancer cells in patients with the disease. The first artificially created cancer-resistant mice were produced in the early years of this decade and showed that such resistance could also be inherited. The mice all stem from a single cancer-resistant mouse discovered in 1999. Related Content More on Science News Back to top © Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2008 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scienceandtechnology/science/sciencenews/3454467/Supermi... 14/11/2008 Scientists are a step closer to creating 'elixir of life' | Mail Online http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1087860/Scientis... Click here to print Scientists are a step closer to creating 'elixir of life' By Fiona Macrae Last updated at 5:30 PM on 20th November 2008 The secrets of eternal youth are being unlocked by scientists. Experiments show that an enzyme called telomerase could be the key ingredient in an 'elixir of life'. Mice engineered to have extra-high levels of telomerase were bred with cancer-resistant creature with astonishing results. Elixir of life? Scientists believe they could slow the process of ageing using the enzyme telomerasety The pups, bred by Spain's National Cancer Institute, lived up to 50 per cent longer the normal. They also had less fat, had better co-ordination and were better at processing sugar, this week's New Scientist reports. Researcher Maria Blasco said: 'You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan.' 1 of 3 21/11/08 09:50 Scientists are a step closer to creating 'elixir of life' | Mail Online http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1087860/Scientis... She said she was optimistic the approach could one day be used to allow people to live longer, because the enzyme was capable of turning 'a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell'. Her optimism is supported by US experiments which found that boosting telomerase levels in white blood cells makes them better at fighting disease. Telomerase is extracted from the Astragalus plant, often used in Chinese medicines with no known adverse effects. It protects tiny bundles of DNA at the end of our chromosomes that get shorter and shorter as our cells divide. Eventually, they get so short that the cells die. Keeping levels of telomerase high could keep ageing at bay. However, some safety concerns remain, because cancer cells produce telomerase at higher than normal rates. 'With anything that boosts telomerase, you may have unwanted cell growth like in cancers,' immunologist Arne Akbar from University College, London said. But Dr Blasco said cancer drugs could be used to offset the negative affects. New Scientist added: 'While an elixir of life in people remains a long way off, the prospect of boosting telomerase to fight disease, including age-related diseases, may be much closer.' 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Find this story at www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1087860/Scientists-step-closer-creating-elixir-life.html 2 of 3 21/11/08 09:50 Nueva Prensa Guayana - Científicos crean tres nuevas armas co... http://nuevaprensa.com.ve/index2.php?option=com_content&ta... Científicos crean tres nuevas armas contra el cáncer Escrito por Redacción MIÉRCOLES, 19 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2008 Un grupo de investigadores españoles lograron crear en el laboratorio un ratón más sano y resistente al cáncer, y que envejece más tarde, llegando, incluso, a vivir un 40 por ciento más que sus semejantes. En este trabajo, publicado en la revista norteamericana Cell, participaron científicos del Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas (CNIO) y un grupo de investigadores de la Universidad de Valencia. Las conclusiones del experimento pueden ser cruciales para la lucha contra el envejecimiento y la multiplicación celular anómala a causa de la presencia de un cáncer. María Blasco, autora principal de este estudio, dijo que para conseguir estos resultados se ha aumentado la telomerasa (enzima) en ratones resistentes a tumores. Aunque en las personas no se puede aumentar la cantidad de los genes, Blasco indicó que "si lo trasladáramos a los humanos sería equivalente a envejecer mucho más tarde y poder llegar a vivir hasta 120 años". Lo que se ha intentado con este experimento es entender qué es el envejecimiento y qué genes son importantes para determinar lo que vivimos, y, para ello, la aproximación científica se basa en generar ratones modificados genéticamente, como modelo, para poder entender lo que pasaría en humanos. Resistencia y longevidad La telomerasa es conocida como "la enzima de la inmortalidad", y lo que 1 of 3 21/11/08 09:45 Nueva Prensa Guayana - Científicos crean tres nuevas armas co... http://nuevaprensa.com.ve/index2.php?option=com_content&ta... se ha estudiado en este experimento es si aumentando su cantidad se puede hacer que el ratón viva más. La relación entre los telómeros (sector terminal de la estructura del cromosoma) y el envejecimiento se conoce desde 1990 gracias a otras investigaciones. Cuanto más largos son los telómeros, más puede multiplicarse una célula (incluidas las células madre que regeneran los tejidos) y, por tanto, el organismo se mantiene joven por más tiempo. Conociendo el riesgo a desarrollar cáncer, los científicos españoles crearon por un lado, un ratón resistente a la enfermedad y, por otro, un roedor con mayor cantidad de Tert, la proteína responsable de la regeneración de los telómeros. El cruce de ambos ratones ha dado lugar a un animal cuyo organismo envejece más tarde y vive más años. En concreto, este animal presenta una buena coordinación neuromuscular a edades avanzadas, además de una mayor tolerancia a la glucosa (lo que significa menos diabetes en la vejez) y unos tejidos más sanos, como la piel y el tracto digestivo, que se mantienen jóvenes. En la actualidad, ya existen moléculas que aumentan la cantidad de telomerasa en las células y hay empresas farmacéuticas que están haciendo pruebas dirigidas a retrasar el envejecimiento de los tejidos aumentando la cantidad de la enzima mencionada. Mientras tanto, la genómica permitirá previsiblemente en el plazo de 7 ó 10 años definir el riesgo de que un cáncer de mama evolucione en metástasis al tiempo que permitirá prescribir tratamientos personalizados para cada tumor. Según el Dr. Javier Hornedo, miembro del comité organizador del simposium Tratamiento Multidisciplinario del Cáncer de Mama celebrado en Madrid, en la actualidad la tendencia apunta a aplicar la quimioterapia antes de operar la mama porque, además de reducir el tamaño del tumor, esta forma de actuar representa un modelo para ensayar los nuevos tratamientos. De esta manera, "en el plazo de 5 ó 6 meses" se puede conocer qué ha pasado en la mama con el tratamiento. Cuando una enferma está recién diagnosticada las metástasis no se ven y cuando se aplica un tratamiento después de extirpar el tumor se pierde un 2 of 3 21/11/08 09:45 Nueva Prensa Guayana - Científicos crean tres nuevas armas co... http://nuevaprensa.com.ve/index2.php?option=com_content&ta... testigo valioso, que indica si la terapia es efectiva o no. Está demostrado que las pacientes que con la quimioterapia pre-operatoria tienen una respuesta patológica completa y en el momento de la cirugía no hay evidencia de enfermedad en la mama ni en la axila tienen una evolución buena. A juicio del experto, en un plazo de 7 ó 10 años serán capaces de saber si un tratamiento de quimioterapia va a ser efectivo y no se tratará la enfermedad "a ciegas". Para ello se obtienen impresiones moleculares de los tumores que permitirán saber si necesitan quimioterapia y cual va a ser efectiva. (EFE) Comentarios Añadir nuevo Buscar RSS ¡Sólo los usuarios registrados pueden escribir comentarios! Cerrar ventana 3 of 3 21/11/08 09:45 Ebedi gençlik iksiri bulundu! - DÜNYA - STARGAZETE.COM http://www.stargazete.com/yazdir/149703 Ebedi gençlik iksiri bulundu! - DÜNYA İspanyol bilim adamları, vücutta doğal olarak oluşan bir enzimin miktarını arttırmanın, hücrelerin ölümüne engel olacağına, daha uzun, sağlıklı ve yaşam dolu bir hayata imkan sağlayacağına inanıyorlar. Vücuttaki telomeraz proteini, kromozomların sonunda bir ayakkabı bağı gibi davranan ve onları çözülmekten kurtaran koruyucu başlığın muhafaza edilmesine yardımcı oluyor. İnsan yaşlandıkça hücreler bölünüyor, bu koruyucu başlıklar yıpranırken kısalıyor ve hücrelerin ölümüyle büyük hasar görüyor. İspanyol bilim adamları, vücudun doğal telomeraz düzeyini arttırmanın onu gençleştireceğine inanıyorlar. Madrid'deki Ulusal Kanser Araştırma Merkezi'nden bir ekip, bu teoriyi laboratuvar fareleri üzerinde denedi ve genetik mühendisliğiyle telomeraz düzeyleri 10 kat arttırılmış olanların, normallerinden yüzde 50 daha uzun yaşadıklarını gördü. Araştırmanın başında yer alan Maria Blasco, New Scientist dergisine yaptığı açıklamada, bu enzimin "normal, ölümlü bir hücreyi, ölümsüz bir hücreye" çevirebileceğini belirterek, aynı yaklaşımın özenli ve dikkatli bir biçimde gösterilmesi durumunda, insan yaşamının da uzatılabileceği konusunda iyimser olduğunu kaydetti. Maria Blasco, "Farenin yaşlanmasını erteleyebilir ve yaşam süresini arttırabilirsiniz. Ancak insanlar üzerinde bunu yapmak çok daha zor" dedi. Telomerazın arttırılmasıyla ortaya çıkan sorunlardan birisi de kanser riskinin çoğalması. Kanser ilaçları sayesinde bunun üstesinden gelinebileceğini ifade eden Dr Blasco, enzimleri arttırılan farelerde, derialtı yağlanmasının azalması ve daha fazla glikoz toleransı gibi başka olumlu sağlık etkilerinin de görüldüğüne işaret etti. URL: http://www.stargazete.com/dunya/ebedi-genclik-iksiri-bulundu-149703.htm Tarih: 21 Kasım 2008 Cuma, 14:27 1 of 2 21/11/08 17:04 Affaritaliani.it - Scienza/ Grazie al super topo vivremmo 120 anni http://www.affaritaliani.it/culturaspettacoli/scienza-grazie-al-sup... > Contattaci > Accedi al tuo profilo Cerca nel sito nel web IL PRIMO QUOTIDIANO ONLINE Venerdi 21 Novembre 11:25 HOME POLITICA ECONOMIA CRONACHE SPORT MILANOITALIA CULTURE/COSTUME MEDIATECH ENTERTAINMENT RUBRICHE FORUM COFFEE BREAK SHOPPING Fai di Affaritaliani.it la tua homepage - Diventa amico su Facebook - Aggiungi a iGoogle CULTURE/COSTUME Scienza/ Grazie al super topo vivremmo 120 anni Venerdí 21.11.2008 10:40 Gli scienziati hanno creato il “supertopo” che non invecchia. Secondo uno studio pubblicato sulla rivista Cell gli esperti dello Spanish National Cancer Research Center sono stati in grado di rendere l’animale resistente al cancro e soprattutto all’età che avanza. Secondo test effettuati il roditore sarebbe infatti in grado di invecchiare il 40 per cento più lentamente rispetto alle cavie su cui non è stata effettuata la ricerca. Il che, se applicato all’uomo, significherebbe che potremmo vivere fino a 120 anni. I ricercatori spagnoli sono riusciti nell’impresa di aumentare nel corpo dell’animale la quantità di una particolare proteina (in grado di “ritardare” la velocità con cui invecchiano le cellule), operazione prima tentata da altri, ma fallita perché poneva il topo a rischio cancro. LE ULTIMISSIME DI CULTURE/COSTUME Ecco il super topo che non invecchia Grazie a lui vivremo fino a 120 anni Novità nel campo della genetica ... Cinema, Israele e i nemici da ascoltare David Grossman è in Italia per presentare "Qualcuno con cui Gli scienziati hanno così risolto il problema modificandone prima i geni (per evitare appunto che si sviluppasse la malattia) e poi accrescendo il valore della proteina, che appunto aiuta le cellule a rigenerarsi e a “mantenersi” giovani. “In questo modo siamo stati in grado di estendere la durata della vita del quaranta per cento”, dice Maria Blasco che ha condotto la ricerca insieme ai colleghi dell’Università di Valencia. E non solo. Il supertopo, dicono gli studiosi, mostra tessuti della pelle più sani, minori problemi digestivi e una maggiore coordinazione neuromuscolare nella “vecchiaia”. Insomma sarebbe più sano, in forma e in grado di battere record di longevità, sostiene la ricercatrice che crede che i risultati dello studio possano interessare soprattutto l’industria cosmetica per combattere attraverso la proteina gli effetti dell’invecchiamento. A maggior ragione se si pensa che, se, l’animale vive il 40 per cento in più, “l’uomo potrebbe arrivare ai centoventi anni” e anche cominciare più tardi ad avere sul proprio corpo i segni del tempo che avanza, conclude la Blasco. Le notizie più gradite Claudia Nuzzarello Vota questa notizia: Danimarca/ La strage delle balene nelle Fr er. Le immagini Patto dello zafferano SilvioUmberto. Alla Lega la presidenza... Ignorare Veltroni e lasciarlo 'sbraitare' Affaritaliani... Economist/ Berlusconi? Nel 2009 dimostri che è un vero... Media voti: Condividi questo articolo > ANNUNCI GOOGLE <> Veltroni, no you can't IL VIDEO Aprenda FX.Negocie ahora Deposite $200 y gane $100 bonos! Negocie en el mayor mercado mundial www.StartForex.com Envia de SMS Gratis Envia 10 SMS Gratis Al Dia Y Baja Los Utimos Tonos Y Fondos. SMS.TonosRapidos.com Dio Ti Ama Una Preghiera di Darle Nuova Vita 1 of 2 21/11/08 11:26 英报:科学证明中国草药含有“长生不老”物质 CCTV.com 中国中央电视台 Página 1 de 3 央视网首页 | 奥运 | 新闻 | 体育 | 娱乐 | 经济 | 房产 | 家居 | TV大社区 | 论坛 | 复兴论 首页 > 新闻频道 > 国际新闻 > 正文 定义你的浏览字号: 小 中 大 千 热词:A 英报:科学证明中国草药含有“长生不老”物质 师受贿罪 开征 姚 个人资料 CCTV.com 2008年11月21日 13:54 进入复兴论坛 来源:环球时报 天饮食 环球时报驻英国特约记者殷娜报道,无论中外,都有长生不老的传说。不过大多数人对 连锁︱ 此不以为然,觉得不过是人类美好愿望而已。但科学家最新研究可能即将揭开长生不老的秘 停止空 住宅智 新领域 密。 据英国每日邮报20日援引《新科学家》的报道,研究显示,一种叫做端粒酶的物质,可 能是长生不老的关键因素。 经过在老鼠身上进行的试验,含有超高端粒酶的老鼠对癌症有让人惊讶的抵抗力。 科学 家相信,通过使用端粒酶,可以减缓人类衰老。 端粒酶从黄芪属植物中萃取,经常被用在中国草药中,没有不良影响。 报道说,西班牙国立癌症研究所饲养的老鼠比正常情况下寿命长50%。研究员Blasco 说,“你可以延缓老鼠衰老,延长它们的寿命。”她表示,她对这种技术有朝一日可让人们活得 更长表示乐观,因为端粒酶可以让正常的细胞变为“不死细胞”。 美国研究也发现,增加血液白细胞端粒酶含量可以让人们更好战胜病魔。 不过,尽管如此,科学家仍有顾虑,因为癌细胞产生的端粒酶也比正常水平高。但医生 表示,抗癌药物可以抵消副作用。 责编:王旭 图片新 第1/1页 打印本页 转发 收藏 关闭 请您纠错 “人民 广告 专家推荐-⑤只救市牛股 白发---脱发怎么办? 糖尿病特效新药问世 前列腺--最新医讯 高血压--获重大突破 警告:高血压--奇方良药 http://news.cctv.com/world/20081121/108303.shtml 扶正镇痫疗法攻克癫痫病 私幕主力拉升③只牛股 残豹找 25/11/2008 The Hindu News Update Service http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/099200811211711.htm News Update Service Friday, November 21, 2008 : 1725 Hrs Sections Top Stories National International Regional Business Sport Sci. & Tech. Entertainment Agri. & Commodities Health Index Photo Gallery The Hindu Print Edition Front Page National Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh Karnataka Kerala Delhi Other States International Opinion Business Sport Miscellaneous Index Magazine Literary Review Metro Plus Business Education Plus Open Page Book Review SciTech NXg Entertainment Cinema Plus Young World Property Plus Quest RSS Feeds Health Weather A step closer to an elixir of youth? Bangalore Chennai Hyderabad Delhi Thiruvananthapuram London (PTI): It seems that scientists are a step closer to creating an elixir of life. A team at the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid has found evidence that a naturally occurring substance, which can create "immortal cells", could be the key ingredient in the fountain of eternal youth. According to the scientists, boosting the amount of the naturally forming enzyme, called telomerase, in the body could prevent cells from dying and thereby slow the process of ageing, The Daily Telegraph reported. The protein telomerase helps maintain the protective caps at ends of chromosomes which act like ends of shoelaces and stop them unravelling. As people age and the cells divide, these caps become frayed and shorter and are so damaged that the cell dies eventually. In fact, the scientists carried out an experiment on laboratory rodents to reach the conclusion. They found that those mice genetically engineered to produce ten times the normal levels of telomerase lived 50 per cent longer than normal. Those animals also had less fat, had better co-ordination and were better at processing sugar. Lead researcher Maria Blasco said that the enzyme was capable of turning "a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell" and a similar approach could eventually lead to extended human lifespans. She, however, urged caution. "You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan. (But) I think it is very hard to extrapolate data from mouse ageing to human ageing," the British newspaper quoted Blasco as telling the New Scientist. One of the problems with boosting telomerase is that it can increase the risk of cancer. However, she said that the obstacle could be overcome by issuing cancer drugs that could offset the negative affects. Health Telomerase activity One step Real Time PCR assay for Telomerase activity detection Cord Blood Cells Umbilical Cord Blood Bank for your Own Use. SSCB at your Disposal! StemBank.ch/Umbilical_Cord_Blood Stem Cell Breakthrough Treating Man's Most Devastating Diseases! Taking Patients Now. www.Medra.com Looking For Antibodies? Find Quality Antibodies For Your Experiments. Order w/ Confidence! www.Millipore.com/Antibodies www.alliedbiotechinc.com NEW Telomerase Detection Sensitive RT PCR Assay For Direct Detection of Telomerase Activity www.ExpressBiotech.com Cell Immortalisation Range Includes TERT / SV40 Antigens Plasmids, Retro/Andenoviral vectors www.nbsbio.co.uk Alleviate Heart Disease Reduce High Blood Pressure Vascular Health/Stop Acidity www.nhe.net/highbloodpressure Human Growth Hormone Get Lean, Build Muscle & Lose Fat. Free Shipping! Buy Two Get One Free www.HumanGrowthHormones.com Fat Grafting "Miracle Diabetes Cure" Fat Grafting StemCells Rejuvenation No scar face lifting www.theamarclinic.com Natural Diabetes Treatment Reveals Type 2 Diabetes Cure Here... 99.1% www.DiabetesReversed.com Sections: Top Stories | National | International | Regional | Business | Sport | Sci. & Tech. | Entertainment | Agri. & Commodities | Health | Index The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Contacts | Subscription Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Business Line News Update | Sportstar | Frontline | Publications | eBooks | Images | Home 1 of 2 21/11/08 16:58 TP: Telomerase verlängert das Leben http://www.heise.de/bin/tp/issue/r4/dl-artikel2.cgi?artikelnr=29... Telomerase verlängert das Leben Florian Rötzer 21.11.2008 Spanische Wissenschaftler konnten an krebsresistenten transgenen Mäusen zeigen, dass diese eine bis zu 50 Prozent längere Lebenszeit haben, wenn das mit Telomerase verbundene Krebsrisiko unterdrückt werden kann Wissenschaftler haben nicht nur Supermäuse geschaffen, die wesentlich leistungsfähiger sind ( Genveränderte Supermäuse (1)) sie haben nun auch gentechnisch veränderte Mäuse entwickelt, die krebsresistent sind und weitaus langsamer als gewöhnliche Mäuse altern. Würden Menschen ebenso verändert werden, dann könnten sie mit einer durchschnittlichen Lebenszeit von 120 Jahren (2) rechnen. Alterungsprozesse hängen auch mit dem Abbau der Telomere bei der Teilung der Chromosomen zusammen. Die Telomer-Kappen an den Enden der Chromosomen schützen diese vor Beeinträchtigungen. Allerdings ist die Länge der Telomere und deren Wiederherstellung begrenzt, so dass nur eine bestimmte Zahl der Zellteilung möglich ist. Diese eingebaute Endlichkeit könnte biologisch die Lebensdauer regulieren, sorgt aber auch dafür, dass sich gefährliche Zellen nicht endlos vermehren können. Könnte man den Abbau der Telomere durch Hinzufügung des für ihre Verlängerung zuständige Enzyms, die Telomerase Reverse Transkriptase (TERT), bremsen, dann müsste sich, der Theorie nach, die Lebenserwartung verlängern, wenn gleichzeitig verhindert wird, dass dadurch auch Tumore besser wachsen können. Telomerase wurde denn auch schon das "Unsterblichkeitsenzym" genannt ( Traum vom ewigen Leben (3)). Am Einbringen von Telomerase wird schon lange geforscht ( Lebensverlängerung? (4)). Eine der krebsresistenten transgenen Mäuse, die dank vermehrter Telomerase-Produktion länger leben Um diese Hypothese zu testen, haben die spanischen Wissenschaftler, wie sie in der Zeitschrift Cell (5) schreiben (6), genveränderte krebsresistente Mäuse für ihren Versuch verwendet. Das ist notwendig, weil die Hinzufügung des Enzyms TERT zu Krebs führen kann. Krebszellen zeichnen sich wie embryonale Stammzellen u.a. dadurch aus, dass sie sich dank Telomerase unkontrolliert und vielleicht auch unbegrenzt vermehren können, weil sich bei ihnen die Telomere nicht bei jeder Teilung wie bei den deswegen alternden Krebszellen abbauen. Das Problem ist also, dass man, wenn man den "Jungbrunnen" Telomerase den Zellen zuführt, damit sie nicht altern, drastisch das Risiko der Krebsentwicklung erhöht, was auch wieder zu frühzeitigem Tod führen kann. Interessant ist also die Forschung mit Telomerase in beiden Richtungen. Unterdrückt man die Bildung des Enzyms, ließe sich damit Tumore bekämpfen, vermehrt man die Bildung könnte dies zu einer Verzögerung des Alterns führen. Beides ist vielversprechend – als therapeutisches oder Anti-Aging-Mittel und als Einnahmequelle, wenn man das jeweils bestehende Dilemma löst. Bei den Mäusen haben die spanischen Wissenschaftler das Dilemma mit Blick auf die Anti-Agig-Wirkung gelöst, 1 of 2 21/11/08 10:06 TP: Telomerase verlängert das Leben http://www.heise.de/bin/tp/issue/r4/dl-artikel2.cgi?artikelnr=29... indem sie durch Genveränderung für eine vermehrte Ausschüttung der Tumorsuppressoren p53 oder p16 und p19ARF gesorgt haben. Diese schützen vor zahlreichen Krebsarten. Die transgenen Mäuse (super-p53 (Sp53) oder super-p16/Arf (Sp16/SArf) sind geschützt vor Krebs, haben aber ein normales Lebensalter. Bei Mäusen mit allen drei Genen (Sp53/Sp16/SArf) wurde bereits ein verzögertes Altern festgestellt. Die Wissenschaftler vermuten, dass die Tumorsuppressoren auch die Beschädigung von Zellen verhindern. Die transgenen Mäuse wurden nun mit solchen Mäusen gekreuzt, die das TERT-Gen codieren und damit Telomerase verstärkt produzieren. Die daraus entstandenen transgenen TERT-Mäuse produzieren in ihren Geweben bis zu 10 Prozent mehr Telomerase. Maligne Tumore traten nicht auf. Bei ihnen heilten Entzündungen der Haut und im Magen- und Darmbereich, die bei älteren Mäusen häufiger vorkommen, schneller als bei gewöhnlichen Mäusen, Stammzellen wurden vermehr produziert. Gegenüber anderen gleich alten Mäusen nahm bei den transgenen TERT-Mäuse die neuromuskuläre Koordination nicht so schnell ab, auch metabolische Störungen und Genschädigungen durch Oxidation traten weniger häufig auf. Dafür lebten sie aber durchschnittlich bis zu 26 Prozent länger als normale Mäuse. Bei den transgenen Mäusen, die alle drei Tumorsuppressoren besaßen, verlängerte sich die Lebenszeit gar um 40 Prozent. Betrachtet man hier die Mäuse, die nicht an Krebs, sondern an Alter starben, so erhöhte sich der Lebensverlängerungseffekt auf 50 Prozent. Überexpression von Telomerase verlängert nicht nur das Leben, so die Wissenschaftler, sofern die Tumorbildung unterdrückt werden kann, sondern erhöht auch schon die Fitness von jungen Mäusen. Zudem wurde festgestellt, dass auch bei den transgenen Mäusen, die keine erhöhte Telomerase-Produktion hatten, der Abbau der Telomere weniger schnell als bei normalen Mäusen eintritt. Maria Blasco vom Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas (7) in Madrid, die führende Wissenschaftlerin der Studie, sagte, Telomerase sei dazu imstande, "eine normale, sterbliche Zelle in eine unsterbliche Zelle" zu verwandeln. Und natürlich sorgt sie für Optimismus und kündet an, dass sich wahrscheinlich mit einem ähnlichen Ansatz auch irgendwann die menschliche Lebenszeit verlängern lassen könnte, wenn man die negativen Effekte der Telomerase durch entsprechende Anti-Krebs-Medikamente verhindert. Aber bis dahin ist es noch ein langer Weg, wenn es überhaupt möglich sein sollte. Die gesellschaftlichen Folgen einer steigenden Lebenserwartung, die auch ohne das Wundermittel Telomerase eintreten, lassen sich schon jetzt beobachten. Das dürfte freilich denen, die es sich leisten könnten, in den Jungbrunnen zu steigen, egal sein. Schon jetzt haben die reichen Menschen schließlich eine höhere Lebenserwartung als die Armen. Links (1) http://www.heise.de/tp/r4/artikel/26/26536/1.html (2) http://www.cnio.es/es/news/docs/maria-blasco-cell-11nov08-es.pdf (3) http://www.heise.de/tp/r4/artikel/2/2049/1.html (4) http://www.heise.de/tp/r4/artikel/2/2244/1.html (5) http://www.cell.com/ (6) http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6WSN-4TX7KY2-C&_user=10&_rdoc=1& _fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10& md5=9a2d404ae66b5e6e230dab88d99c9a58 (7) http://www.cnio.es/es/index.asp Telepolis Artikel-URL: http://www.heise.de/tp/r4/artikel/29/29190/1.html Copyright © Heise Zeitschriften Verlag 2 of 2 21/11/08 10:06 The Elixir of Life is Within Grasp: Scientists http://www.medindia.net/news/view_main_print_new.asp Web Medindia Advanced Search www.ProtegeDiabetes.org Ads by Google Feedback - Ads by Google COQ10 Heart Holistic Health News Health Website Exercise for Seniors The Elixir of Life is Within Grasp: Scientists The notion of the “elixir of life” has tantalized the fantasies of many with its charms of undying youth and promises of endless passion. Spanish scientists have identified the enzyme telomerase which, they think, is an essential ingredient of this elixir and could unlock the secrets of the magic potion. According to researchers, boosting the amount of telomerase in the body could prevent cells from dying and so lead to extended and healthier lifespans. Telomerase, extracted from the Astragalus plant, is often used in Chinese medicines with no known adverse effects. Leukemia Symptoms Keep Your Heart Young Free Report: New Miracle Nutrient Stay Young With a Healthy Heart www.alsearsmd.com Stroke Patients Answers to your questions about Stroke symptoms, treatments & more. yourtotalhealth.ivillage.com It protects tiny bundles of DNA at the end of our chromosomes that get shorter and shorter as our cells divide. Eventually, they get so short that the cells die. To reach the conclusion, the team at the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid tested the theory on mice and found that those genetically engineered to produce 10 times the normal levels of telomerase lived 50 per cent longer than normal, reports the Telegraph. Reverse Cachexia TumorX ATP Pure Energy Natural Products That Work www.hopewelltechnologieslimited.com Maria Blasco, who led the research, told the New Scientist said that the enzyme was capable of turning "a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell". She added that she was optimistic that a similar approach may eventually lead to extended human lifespans. "You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan. I think it is very hard to extrapolate data from mouse ageing to human ageing," she said. However, some safety concerns remain, because cancer cells produce telomerase at higher than normal rates. Blasco said this could be overcome by also issuing cancer drugs that could offset the negative affects. Disease Pathway Analysis Find targets and biomarkers, build new pathways. Free software demo. www.ariadnegenomics.com Pharmatest Services Fast and reliable preclinical pharmacodynamic research services. www.pharmatest.fi Source-ANI TAN Print this Document Last Updated - November 24, 2008-Designed & Content Managed by Medindia Health Network Pvt Ltd. Hosted & Technical Support by Front Point Systems Disclaimer - The contents of this site are for informational purposes only. Always seek the advice of a qualified physician for any doubts. To Read full Disclaimer Click Here! Advertise with us | Medindia Copyright | Privacy Policy © All Rights Reserved 1997 - 2008 1 of 1 24/11/08 09:52 RedOrbit NEWS | Fountain Of Youth May Be Closer Than Exp... http://www.redorbit.com/modules/news/tools.php?tool=print&i... Fountain Of Youth May Be Closer Than Expected Scientists may need to look no further than to the human body to find keys to prevent aging. It appears that by increasing the amount of a naturally occurring enzyme in the human body, researchers could prevent cells from dying. A protein called telomerase works to prevent the protective caps on the ends of chromosomes from becoming shorter and ragged. It helps maintain the protective caps and keeps them from unraveling. The enzymes were capable of “turning a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell,” said lead researcher Maria Blasco. The team at the Spanish National Cancer Center in Madrid genetically engineered mice to produce 10 times the amount of telomerase that a body normally has. They found the mice lived 50 percent longer than usual. The mice also had an increased tolerance for glucose and less subcutaneous fat. "You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan," said Blasco. "(But)I think it is very hard to extrapolate data from mouse aging to human aging." One of the problems with boosting telomerase is that it can increase the risk of cancer. Dr Blasco said this could be overcome by also issuing cancer drugs that could offset the negative affects. --On the Net: Spanish National Cancer Center Story from REDORBIT NEWS: http://www.redorbit.com/news/display/?id=1602166 Published: 2008/11/21 13:03:53 CST © RedOrbit 2005 1 of 1 24/11/08 09:48 Scientists on Trail of Fountain of Youth Automotive 23/11/08 10:17 CONSUMER NEWS RECALLS Small Claims Guide Class Actions Education Electronics Family Ads by Google | Archives Auto | Cells, etc. SCAM ALERTS Newsletters Homeowners Shopping Complain about a product or service Travel Free Report: New Miracle Nutrient Anti Aging Therapy Keeps You Young www.alsearsmd.com Animal Rights Law | Health FAQ Heatlh Tips to Stay Young Sensitive RT PCR Assay For Direct Detection of Telomerase Activity www.ExpressBiotech.com Latest Lemon Laws Finance NEW Telomerase Detection NEWS COMPLAINT FORM Stem Cell UK | Computers | Financial Cruelty to Animals | Health | Homeowners Search Telomerase activity One step Real Time PCR assay for Telomerase activity detection www.alliedbiotechinc.com Prevent Cancer | Parents | Privacy Cancer Info | Scams | Seniors | Travel Scientists on Trail of Fountain of Youth Chemical could improve cell life, slow aging, and defeat disease Telomerase activity One step Real Time PCR assay for Telomerase activity detection www.alliedbiotechinc.com Cell Immortalisation Range Includes TERT / SV40 Antigens Plasmids, Retro/Andenoviral vectors www.nbsbio.co.uk Type 1 Diabetes Research Diagnosed With Type 1 Diabetes? Participate in a JDRF Funded Study www.ProtegeDiabetes.org Astragaloside 4 Used for telomere regrowth and potential life extention November 21, 2008 There may soon be a pill that could stop, or at least slow, the aging process. Scientists say that boosting the levels of a chemical found in the body could prolong cell life, warding off disease and leading to longer lifespans. The virtual fountain of youth may be the protein telomerase, which is produced naturally in the body to provide protection to chromosomes. When cells age, they divide and are more likely to die. Boosting telomerase, they say, could hold cells together longer, prolonging their lives. The research was carried out at the Spanish National Cancer Center in Madrid, where scientists tested the theory on laboratory animals. They say those whose bodies were induced to produce extra telomerase expanded their lifespans by 50 percent. Though promising, the research doesn't tell scientists exactly how boosting telomerase levels would work in humans, according to lead researcher Maria Blasco. And then there may be a pretty significant side effect. Raising the level of telomerase in the body might increase the risk of cancer, Blasco says. She says more study is needed before the therapy is tried on human subjects. cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI. HGH: Human Growth Hormone Get Lean, Build Muscle & Lose Fat. Free Shipping! Buy Two Get One Free Report Your Experience If you've had a bad experience -- or a good one -- with a consumer product or service, we'd like to hear about it. All complaints are reviewed by class action attorneys and are considered for publication on our site. Knowledge is power! Help spread the word. File your consumer report now. November 23 2008 States Want Stronger Used Car Rule Stock Swoon Creates a Chance to 'Buy Low' Weekly Interest Rate Roundup Agencies Unlikely to Swap Car Loans Humane Society Accuses Petland of Supporting Puppy Mills How Would GM Bankruptcy Affect You? Gas Prices Fall Below $2 a Gallon Medicare Fraud Risk Grows for Some More News ... www.HumanGrowthHormones.com Digg ? http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2008/11/fountain.html Página 1 de 3 High Hopes for Immortal Cell Research 23/11/08 10:18 + + + 3 BRANDNEW NewsTickers for your Website! + + + easy configurable in less than 1 Minute + + + GET'EM NOW! + + + NEW Telomerase Detection Sensitive RT PCR Assay For Direct Detection of Telomerase Activity www.ExpressBiotech.com Telomerase activity One step Real Time PCR assay for Telomerase activity detection www.alliedbiotechinc.com Cell Immortalisation Range Includes TERT / SV40 Antigens Plasmids, Retro/Andenoviral vectors www.nbsbio.co.uk Home | Join | Submit News | MyShortNews | HighScores | FAQ'S | Forums Health Fitness ShortNews Search Breast Cancer Research HCPs: Read about the latest drug approved for ErbB2 positive MBC www.gskoncology.eu Chat | 11 Users Online 11/23/2008 10:17 AM All 434 Visits 2 Assessments go search all Channels 11/22/2008 12:56 AM Scientists from the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid believe they are one step closer to developing the elixir of youth. The process involves flooding the body with the enzyme telomerase, to a degree that is much higher than occurs naturally. Colon Cancer Symptoms Parkinson News Competitor Research News Aggregation News Clipping As we age, cells do too. Cells will eventually self-destruct as the ends of their chromosomes become unraveled. The protein telomerase serves to maintain the ends of chromosomes to prevent this. The theory was tested on mice via genetic engineering. Top News Health The mice that were engineered were made to produce 10 times normal levels of telomerase. These animals lived 50% longer than regular mice. Increasing this level in humans could increase cancer risk, so cancer drugs would have to be used as well. 14-Year-Old Lives 118 Days With No Heart New Cure for Wrinkles Made from Babies' Penises Source: www.telegraph.co.uk WebReporter: zatonado001 Woman Sues After Getting Transplanted Kidney With HIV and Hepatitis C Health Insurers Duped Into Paying for Massages With a 'Happy Ending' One Child Dead Every Six Seconds Rare Syndrome Causes Woman to Speak in Foreign Accents CDC Declares Vermont City Healthiest in U.S. Free Viagra South of the Border Permalink High Hopes for Immortal Cell Research Ads by Google Girl, 10, First to Diagnose Her Autism After Reading a Children's Book About it ID: 75025 Recommendation: my@friend.com ASSESS this news: Assessment: BLOCK this news. Reason: Reason: 4 Comments This is new to me.. can anyone expand on this subject for me? by: captainJane 11/22/2008 08:16 AM Perhapse there is hope, the are able to reduce the cancer risk. by: vizhatlan 11/22/2008 03:55 PM Man Pregnant With http://www.shortnews.com/start.cfm?id=75025 Página 1 de 2 Scientists create ’supermice’ that can resist cancer and age | Ente... http://www.entertainmentandshowbiz.com/scientists-create-sup... Entertainment and Showbiz! Entertainment, Showbiz, Celebrities, Television, Movies, Fashion! Home Bollywood Celebrities Events Lifestyle Movies Music NewsPlus Other News Sports Television Uncategorized Ads by Google Xenograft Tumor P53 Antibodies Telomerase activity Cell Immortalisation One step Real Time PCR assay for Telomerase activity detection Range Includes TERT / SV40 Antigens Plasmids, Retro/Andenoviral vectors P53 Apoptosis Xenograft Mice Scientists create ’supermice’ that can resist cancer and age Posted on November 20, 2008 | Category: Other News In a breakthrough study, Spanish scientists have created a genetically modified ’supermice’ that can resist cancer and which age almost half as fast as other mice. The research team from Valencia University modified the genes of the mice to make them resistant to cancer and slow down aging by increasing the amount of a particular protein called telomerase. The protein helps cells to regenerate, allowing them to stay younger for longer. Previous studies had shown that attempts to increase the amount of the protein in mice made them more vulnerable to cancer. In the new study, the researchers modified the genes of the mice in such away that made it resistant to the disease. 1 of 4 21/11/08 10:10 Scientists create ’supermice’ that can resist cancer and age | Ente... http://www.entertainmentandshowbiz.com/scientists-create-sup... The resulting mice were found to have better muscle in old age, healthier skin tissue and fewer digestion problems. The mice aged 40 per cent slower than those whose genes have not been modified. “By simultaneously increasing the amounts of telomerase and the resistance to cancer we are able to delay ageing in mice and also to extend their life span by 40 per cent,” the Telegraph quoted Maria A. Blasco, lead researcher from the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO). “These mice get to live for as long as the eldest mice in records of the same kind, “If we were to parallel it to humans, then it would mean reaching 120 years of age and also to start ageing much later in life,” she added. (ANI) www.caprotec.com/ Ads by Goooooogle Scientists create stem cells without using cancer-causing viruses Scientists create glow in the dark cat to treat cystic fibrosis Scientists create the world’s first blue roses Scientists decode DNA of lung cancer genes ‘Super-tomatoes’ may help keep cancer at bay Scientists grow eggs from five-year-old girls with cancer Coming soon, ‘BioBeer’ with wine’s cancer fighting qualities Scientists place window in mice’s chests to follow cancer cell spread Newly created peptide turns cancer friend into foe HPV virus aids cervical and head and neck cancer progression » Filed Under Other News Leave a Reply Name (required) Mail (will not be published) (required) Website Submit Comment 2 of 4 21/11/08 10:10 Scientists come a step closer to creating ‘elixir of youth’ http://www.newspostonline.com/world-news/scientists-come-a-... Business National Health Sci-Tech Sports Ads by Google HGH Anti Aging Solar Cells Antiaging com WWW Antiaging Newspost Online World News, Views, Reviews and Opinions! Search the archives... Go Home World News Features Video Entertainment Subscribe by RSS Subscribe by email Scientists come a step closer to creating ‘elixir of youth’ admin November 21st, 2008 World News London, Nov 21 (ANI): Spanish scientists are a step closer to unlocking the secrets of eternal youth after showing that an enzyme called telomerase could be the key ingredient in an ”elixir of life”. According to researchers, boosting the amount of telomerase in the body could prevent cells from dying and so lead to extended and healthier lifespans. Telomerase, extracted from the Astragalus plant, is often used in Chinese medicines with no known adverse effects. It protects tiny bundles of DNA at the end of our chromosomes that get shorter and shorter as our cells divide. Eventually, they get so short that the cells die. 1 of 4 21/11/08 09:48 Scientists come a step closer to creating ‘elixir of youth’ http://www.newspostonline.com/world-news/scientists-come-a-... To reach the conclusion, the team at the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid tested the theory on mice and found that those genetically engineered to produce 10 times the normal levels of telomerase lived 50 per cent longer than normal, reports the Telegraph. Telomerase Detection Sensitive RT PCR Assay For Direct Detection of Telomerase Activity www.ExpressBiotech.com Telomerase activity One step Real Time PCR assay for Telomerase activity detection www.alliedbiotechinc.com Maria Blasco, who led the research, told the New Scientist said that the enzyme was capable of turning “a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell”. She added that she was optimistic that a similar approach may eventually lead to extended human lifespans. Cell Immortalisation Range Includes TERT / SV40 Antigens Plasmids, Retro/Andenoviral vectors www.nbsbio.co.uk Load Cell & Load Pin Standard & Special Design Load Cells, Calibration & Repair www.pcm-uk.com “You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan. (But)I think it is very hard to extrapolate data from mouse ageing to human ageing, she said. However, some safety concerns remain, because cancer cells produce telomerase at higher than normal rates. Blasco said this could be overcome by also issuing cancer drugs that could offset the negative affects. (ANI) World News Advertise on this site Powered By AdBrite Ads by AdBrite Related Headlines: Leave a Reply Name (required) Email (not published) (required) Website Submit Reset You can use these XHTML tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> 2 of 4 21/11/08 09:48 The Hindu Business Line : A step closer to an elixir of youth? http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/blnus/18211244.htm Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications Friday, November 21, 2008 ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version | Audio Home News Update Update at 1330 hrs (IST) Friday, November 21, 2008 2:08:59 PM Sensex , ACC 394.70 -13.25 B H E L 1,238.50 News Corporate Markets Info-Tech Marketing Money & Banking Agri-Biz & Commodities Industry & Economy Logistics Government Opinion Variety Corporate Results Columns States Web Extras Index Features Investment World eWorld Brand Line Mentor Life Brand Quest The New Manager BL Club Smartbuy Stocks Quotes SE Diary Scoreboard Open-End Mutual Fund Cross Currency Rates Shipping Ports Variety A step closer to an elixir of youth? LONDON: It seems that scientists are a step closer to creating an elixir of youth. A team at the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid has found evidence that a naturally occurring substance, which can create “immortal cells”, could be the key ingredient in the fountain of eternal youth. According to the scientists, boosting the amount of the naturally forming enzyme, called telomerase, in the body could prevent cells from dying and thereby slow the process of ageing, The Daily Telegraph reported. The protein telomerase helps maintain the protective caps at ends of chromosomes which act like ends of shoelaces and stop them unravelling. Yesterday Datewise Resources In Focus In Depth Events 2007 STOCKS :21-NOV-2008 Sensex 8581.92 130.91 As people age and the cells divide, these caps become frayed and shorter and are so damaged that the cell dies eventually. In fact, the scientists carried out an experiment on laboratory rodents to reach the conclusion. They found that those mice genet ically engineered to produce 10 times the normal levels of telomerase lived 50 per cent longer than normal. Those animals also had less fat, had better co-ordination and were better at processing sugar. Lead researcher Maria Blasco said that the enzyme was capable of turning **a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell” and a similar approach could eventually lead to extended human lifespans. One of the problems with boosting telomerase is that it can increase the risk of cancer. However, she said that the obstacle could be overcome by issuing cancer drugs that could offset the negative affects. – PTI Prev: Religare, AEGON announce MF recast plan Next: Madurai dt coop banks to give loans to farmers Ads by Google Human Growth Hormone Get Lean, Build Muscle & Lose Fat. Free Shipping! Buy Two Get One Free www.HumanGrowthHormones.com GET QUOTES Enter Ticker Top Gainers/Losers Top Traded on Value Top Traded Quantity Astragaloside 4 Used for telomere regrowth and potential life extention cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI. Business Line | NUS Index | Cella di pesatura Wipotec Precisa e veloce! Sistemi di pesatura dinamici www.wipotec.com Telomerase activity One step Real Time PCR assay for Telomerase activity detection Related Topics Errors & Omissions Expected Ex Parte India Interior Reflections Say Cheek Sticklish Singles revolutnry stem cell cure epilepsy,macular degenerat.,rheuma tel. 001 7862201892; 00505 4223371 www.julius-hellenthal.de www.alliedbiotechinc.com Telomerase Detection Sensitive RT PCR Assay For Direct Detection of Telomerase Activity www.ExpressBiotech.com Archives www.caprotec.com/ Human Stem Cells Autologous Stem Cells: Save and Bank them with the Leader: SSCB! StemBank.ch/Stem_Cells Search Subscription Business Line Group Sites 1 of 2 21/11/08 09:53 Scientists come a step closer to creating elixir of youth(Re-issue) http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/india-news/scientists-com... Breaking News Karzai: Obama promises to increase aid to Afghanistan, fight terrorism in 'region' -- AP AP: Lawrence Summers to be named Director of National Economic Council during Monday's press conference. AP: President-elect Obama to name New York Federal Reserve Chairman Geithner as Treasury Secretary in a press conference on Monday. OBAMA TO ANNOUNCE GEITHNER AT TREASURY, SUMMERS AS DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL ECONOMIC COUNCIL -- AP SOURCES (BULLETIN) Twelve firefighters have been injured, 5 of them critical, when two fire trucks en-route to a fire in New York City collided. via @BreakingNewsOn Latest News Metro worker dies after falling at under construction track Avoid stereotypes that enlarge fault lines, introspect: PM Uttar Pradesh policeman shoots at youth, suspended Tribal refugees to cast votes through postal ballot in Mizoram I’ll never do ‘Bigg Boss’ again, says winner Ashutosh Kaushik Two men crushed to death in bus accident Border police to step up security at the Indo-Nepal border World Buddhist forum to be held next year Dozen hurt in poll clashes amid heavy voting in Jammu region (Lead) Tata in secret loan talks with British government: report Search Scientists come a step closer to creating elixir of youth(Re-issue) November 23rd, 2008 - 4:47 pm ICT by ANI The New Elixir of Youth Astragaloside IV - Activates Telomerase Slows Telomere Loss www.terraternal.com Stem Cells Autologous Stem Cells: Save and Bank them with the Leader: SSCB! StemBank.ch/Stem_Cells revolutnry stem cell cure epilepsy,macular degenerat.,rheuma tel. 001 7862201892; 00505 4223371 www.julius-hellenthal.de London, Nov 23 (ANI): Spanish scientists are a step closer to unlocking the secrets of eternal youth after showing that an enzyme called telomerase could be the key ingredient in an ”elixir of life”. According to researchers, boosting the amount of telomerase in the body could prevent cells from dying and so lead to extended and healthier lifespans. Telomerase, extracted from the Astragalus plant, is often used in Chinese medicines with no known adverse effects. It protects tiny bundles of DNA at the end of our chromosomes that get shorter and shorter as our cells divide. Eventually, they get so short that the cells die. To reach the conclusion, the team at the Spanish National Cancer Centre in Madrid tested the theory on mice and found that those genetically engineered to produce 10 times the normal levels of telomerase lived 50 per cent longer than normal, reports the Telegraph. Maria Blasco, who led the research, told the New Scientist said that the enzyme was capable of turning “a normal, mortal cell into an immortal cell”. She added that she was optimistic that a similar approach may eventually lead to extended human lifespans. “You can delay the ageing of mice and increase their lifespan. (But)I think it is very hard to extrapolate data from mouse ageing to human ageing, she said. 5 of 7 24/11/08 09:59 Scientists come a step closer to creating elixir of youth(Re-issue) http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/india-news/scientists-com... However, some safety concerns remain, because cancer cells produce telomerase at higher than normal rates. Blasco said this could be overcome by also issuing cancer drugs that could offset the negative affects. (ANI) vote now submit Share on Facebook Post to: del.icio.us Powered by AdToll Advertise here Posted in National, | Related Stories Tags Related Stories Scientists come a step closer to creating elixir of youth - November 21, 2008 Scientists create ‘’supermice” that can resist cancer and age - November 14, 2008 Study opens door to new cancer, ageing treatments - September 1, 2008 Rodents with long lifespans have evolved anti-cancer mechanisms - September 18, 2008 Indian origin researcher finds way to make tumour cells easier to destroy - May 7, 2008 Groundbreaking study paves way for new cancer, aging treatments - September 1, 2008 Tumor growth breakthrough raises hope for cancer therapy (Re-issue) - March 17, 2008 Tumor growth breakthrough raises hope for cancer therapy - March 16, 2008 Fat-producing stem cells may harbour obesity cure - October 11, 2008 Achilles” heel of pancreatic cancer identified - November 7, 2008 Categories - National Tags Leave a Comment 6 of 7 24/11/08 09:59 DinSide Helse - Fant ungdomskilden Página 1 de 3 Ungdomskilden kan være avslørt av spanske forskere, men den er ikke uten alvorlige bivirkninger. (Foto: Colourbox.com) Fant ungdomskilden Kan forlenge livet med 50 prosent, mener forskere. DinSide "I want to be forever young" sang gruppen Alphaville på 80-tallet. Og nå mener faktisk spanske forskere å ha funnet kilden til evig ungdom. Les også: Slik lever du 14 år lenger Ifølge forskere ved Spanias nasjonale senter for kreftforskning kan et enzym som finnes naturlig i menneskekroppen få cellene til å leve lengre, og man vil dermed kunne utsette kroppens aldringsprosess. Beskytter cellene Enzymet telomerase beskytter kromosonene som ligger i kjernen av cellene våre. Det er med på å vedlikeholde endene på hvert enkelt kromosom, men med tiden vil disse endene likevel bli slitt. På et tidspunkt vil de bli så skadet at http://www.dinside.no/helse/fant+ungdomskilden+/art795367.html 25/11/2008 DinSide Helse - Fant ungdomskilden Página 2 de 3 cellen til slutt dør. Ny forskning tyder imidlertid på at en større mengde telomerase vil kunne forlenge cellenes, og dermed menneskets, levetid. Les også: Vitaminet som holder deg ung De spanske forskerne avlet frem en gruppe mus, som produserte ti ganger mer telomerase i cellevevet som dekker kroppens overflate, enn hva som er normalt. Og musene viste seg å leve 50 prosent lengre enn andre mus. I tillegg fikk de bedre koordinasjonsevner og mindre underhudsfett. Gode resultater - Vi har oppdaget at vi kan forsinke aldringsprosessen hos mus, og dermed øke levetiden deres, sier leder av studien, Maria Blasco til New Scientist. Hun er optimistisk ved tanken på at en ekstra dose tilført telomerase kan ha samme effekt på mennesker. Det er imidlertid noen utfordringer som gjenstår før ungdomskilden er å få i apotekhyllene. Les også: Er livet over etter 25? Et økt nivå av telomerase gir nemlig større risiko for å utvikle kreft. En mulig løsning kan ifølge Blasco være å gi personer som får telomerase-behandling kreftmedisin. Studien er publisert i siste utgave av tidsskriftet New Scientist. http://www.dinside.no/helse/fant+ungdomskilden+/art795367.html 25/11/2008 Science News / Telomere Enzyme A Likely Key To Longevity Página 1 de 2 http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/38552 Home / News / News item TELOMERE ENZYME A LIKELY KEY TO LONGEVITY By Patrick Barry : Study gives mice a longevity boost without high cancer risk A new experiment suggests that the enzyme telomerase can extend the lifespan of mice by about 24 percent. Some cells can keep dividing forever, essentially becoming immortal thanks in part to telomerase. But evidence for whether this enzyme affects aging and longevity in larger organisms such as people has been muddled and contradictory. While the enzyme enables cells to keep dividing, it also takes cells one step closer to growing and proliferating out of control — that is, becoming cancerous. Lab animals with extra genes for telomerase often die young from tumors. Reporting in the Nov. 14 Cell, researchers in Spain engineered mice to have not only an extra copy of the gene for telomerase, but also extra anti-tumor genes to combat the enzyme’s cancer-causing potential. In the altered mice, signs of aging such as poor coordination or degraded tissue health were delayed compared to mice that had only the extra copies of anti-tumor genes, the team reports. “These observations demonstrate the anti-aging effects of telomerase in ... living organisms,” Maria Blasco of the Molecular Oncology Program at the Spanish National Cancer Research Center in Madrid and her colleagues write in the report. Telomerase lengthens telomeres — the “caps” on the end of chromosomes that protect DNA from damage. Like burning fuses, telomeres normally get shorter each time that most body cells divide. After a certain number of divisions, the telomeres in the daughter cells become too short and the chromosomes start to degrade, thus preventing the cells from dividing any further. So this shortening of telomeres places a limit on the number of times that most body cells can divide, the so-called Hayflick limit. Telomerase enables the cell to divide indefinitely by adding back the bit of telomere lost during each cell division, essentially keeping the fuse from burning. Previous research has shown that adding an active copy of the telomerase gene to human cells causes those cells to surpass the Hayflick limit and apparently divide without end. But people with longer telomeres don’t necessarily live any longer than people with short telomeres do, so evidence for a link with lifespan has been fuzzy. Leonard Hayflick, the biogerontologist who in 1961 discovered the limit on cell division that bears his name, says he agrees that the new research shows that telomerase can affect longevity in mice. But he doubts the scientists’ claim that the enzyme affects the actual rate of aging. The problem, Hayflick says, is how to measure that rate. Blasco’s team tested a series of traits that might be thought of as associated with aging: whether the mice had enough coordination to walk across a rope, the health of the mice’s skin and small intestines, the mice’s sensitivity to insulin and glucose, concentrations of insulinlike growth factor-1 in the blood and, of course, average telomere length. In each of these cases, mice with the extra telomerase gene performed more like youthful mice than those with only the anti-tumor genes. But these tests may or may not reflect the actual rate of aging, Hayflick says. “They’re about as bad as looking at gray hair,” says Hayflick, who is a professor of anatomy at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine. “Look at me. I’m 80 years old and my hair’s still black.” A lack of reliable, agreed-upon ways to measure the rate of aging is a problem for the whole field of aging research, Hayflick says, not just for this study. Longevity — how long an animal lives — is less ambiguous. While the question still is not settled, Hayflick says, “A strengthening case has been made on the role of telomeres in affecting longevity.” http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/38552/title/Telomere_enzyme_a_likely_key... 14/11/2008 n-tv.de Página 1 de 1 DRUCKEN Freitag, 14. November 2008 Krebsresistent und alt Jungbrunnen für Mäuse Spanische Forscher haben eine genveränderte "Supermaus" geschaffen, die länger lebt und weniger krebsanfällig ist. Grundlage der Arbeit war die Rolle des "Jungbrunnen-Enzyms" Telomerase beim Altern, wie die Molekularbiologin María Blasco vom Nationalen Spanischen Krebsforschungszentrum (CNIO) in Madrid nach Presseberichten erläuterte. Die Telomerase schütze die Zellen zwar vor dem Altern, fördere aber zugleich die Tumorbildung. Bei der "Supermaus" kombinierte das Team um Blasco nun zwei Eigenschaften: Die Wissenschaftler veränderten die Aktivität eines Telomerase-Gens und verstärkten zugleich die Arbeit mehrerer Gene (p53, p16 und p19ARF), die vor Krebs schützen. Das Ergebnis ist, dass die Mäuse um 40 Prozent länger leben und unempfindlicher gegen Krebsauslöser sind als ihre Artgenossen. Beim Menschen seien solche Manipulationen zwar nicht möglich, sagte Blasco, deren Ergebnisse in der US-Fachzeitschrift "Cell" veröffentlicht sind. Die Pharmaindustrie forscht derzeit an Telomerase-Medikamenten, die kürzer gewordene Telomere in den Zellen nachwachsen lassen sollen. Die Zellen altern dann langsamer. Blasco war für ihre TelomeraseForschung im September in Hamburg mit dem Körber-Preis für Europäische Wissenschaft ausgezeichnet worden. Adresse: http://www.n-tv.de/1053729.html http://www.n-tv.de/1053729.html?tpl=druck 14/11/2008 Badisches Tagblatt NetContent Página 1 de 1 zurück drucken Spanische «Supermaus» lebt länger Madrid (dpa) - Spanische Forscher haben eine genveränderte «Supermaus» geschaffen, die länger lebt und weniger krebsanfällig ist. Grundlage der Arbeit war die Rolle des «Jungbrunnen-Enzyms» Telomerase beim Altern. Dies erläutert die Molekularbiologin María Blasco vom Nationalen Spanischen Krebsforschungszentrum (CNIO) in Madrid nach Presseberichten vom Freitag. Die Telomerase schütze die Zellen zwar vor dem Altern, fördere aber zugleich die Tumorbildung. Bei der «Supermaus» kombinierte das Team um Blasco nun zwei Eigenschaften: Die Wissenschaftler veränderten die Aktivität eines Telomerase-Gens und verstärkten zugleich die Arbeit mehrerer Gene (p53, p16 und p19ARF), die vor Krebs schützen. Das Ergebnis ist, dass die Mäuse um 40 Prozent länger leben und unempfindlicher gegen Krebsauslöser sind als ihre Artgenossen. Beim Menschen seien solche Manipulationen zwar nicht möglich, sagte Blasco, deren Ergebnisse in der US-Fachzeitschrift «Cell» (Bd. 135, S. 609) vom Freitag veröffentlicht sind. Die Pharmaindustrie forscht derzeit an Telomerase-Medikamenten, die kürzer gewordene Telomere in den Zellen nachwachsen lassen sollen. Die Zellen altern dann langsamer. Blasco war für ihre Telomerase-Forschung im September in Hamburg mit dem Körber-Preis für Europäische Wissenschaft ausgezeichnet worden. http://www.badisches-tagblatt.de/html/unterticker/LINK00_20081114171506_Spanische... 14/11/2008 De Morgen Gezondheid - Spaanse wetenschappers creëren "supermuizen" (487954) Página 1 de 1 venster sluiten Denk aan het milieu. Denk na voor je print! Spaanse wetenschappers creëren "supermuizen" Spaanse wetenschappers zijn erin geslaagd "supermuizen" te creëren, die bestand zijn tegen kanker en veertig procent langer leven. De sleutel van het experiment was een enzyme met de naam telomerase. Hierdoor worden de uiteinden van de chromosomen verlengd. Daardoor kunnen cellen blijven delen en dat zou ervoor zorgen dat de levensduur wordt verlengd. Het risico op kanker wordt hierdoor echter wel groter. De muizen werden daarom genetisch gemanipuleerd om bestand te zijn tegen kanker. "Gelijkaardige technieken zouden ervoor kunnen zorgen dat mensen 120 jaar oud worden", aldus een van de onderzoekers. Het was echter niet mogelijk om dezelfde methode voor genetische manipulatie toe te passen op mensen, legde ze uit. (belga/bdr) 14/11/08 14u01 De Persgroep Publishing. Alle rechten voorbehouden. http://www.demorgen.be/dm/article/print/detail.do?language=nl&navigationItemId=993... 14/11/2008 Het Nieuwsblad Online Página 1 de 1 Spaanse wetenschappers creëren 'supermuizen' - 14/11/2008 14:52:45 Spaanse wetenschappers zijn erin geslaagd 'supermuizen' te creëren, die bestand zijn tegen kanker en veertig procent langer kunnen leven, meldden diverse media vrijdag. De muizen werden genetisch gemanipuleerd door onderzoekers van het centrum van kankeronderzoek CNIO en de universiteit van Valencia, meldt onder meer het magazine 'Cell'. De sleutel van het experiment was een enzyme met de naam telomerase. Dankzij telomerase worden de uiteinden van de chromosomen, bekend als telomeren, verlengd. De cellen kunnen immers blijven delen en dat zou ervoor zorgen dat de levensduur wordt verlengd. Het risico op kanker wordt daardoor echter wel groter. De muizen werden genetisch gemanipuleerd om bestand te zijn tegen kanker, terwijl de hoeveelheid telomerase in hun lichaam werd verhoogd. Daardoor hadden de muizen een beter neuro-musculaire coördinatie, een kleinere kans om diabetes te ontwikkelen en ook hun weefsel was gezonder op latere leeftijd dan bij gewone muizen. Ze leefden ook tot veertig procent langer. 'De relatie tussen telomeren en het ouder worden is bekend sinds 1990, maar het is de eerste keer dat de levensverwachting van een heel organisme verlengd is', zei Maria Blasco, voorzitter van de studie in de krant El Mundo. 'Gelijkaardige technieken zouden ervoor kunnen zorgen dat mensen 120 jaar oud worden', zei Blasco. Het was echter niet mogelijk om dezelfde methode voor genetische manipulatie toe te passen op mensen, legde ze uit. vdy (belga) http://www.nieuwsblad.be/Article/PrintArticle.aspx?ArticleID=DMF14112008_059 14/11/2008 Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase Delays Aging in Cancer-Resistant Mice | Cancer For... Página 1 de 2 PhD focused Google Web Search Submit Search Ask a Research Scientist or Clinical Researcher. Not affiliated with any Pharmaceutical Company or Center. >>Register Here<< Search This Site Cancer News | Cancer Forums | Hyper-Learning | Hire a Researcher | Search | Home Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase Delays Aging in Cancer-Resistant Mice Submitted by Dross on Fri, 2008-11-14 06:09. email this page | 42 reads telomerase Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase Delays Aging Toxicology Model Organism Find Over 700,000 Gene Expression Assays Or in Cancer-Resistant Mice Customize Your Own Now. www.AppliedBiosystems.com I have had a few people ask me about telomerase. They look for it in creams, they buy pills of it, mostly because they have heard that cells need telomerase to continue dividining, and that there is a finite amount of it in each cell. My answer has always been telomerase will extend the life of the cell (which by the way I don't see a cream helping to get through the cell membrane, but I digress) but it will also aid the continuation of the life of a cancerous cell. Well here is a story about the fountain of youth. The important thing to take away from this though, is that you do nto have enhanced expression of p53, p16 or p19ARF! Stem Cell Breakthrough Over 1000 Patients Treated for Multiple Diseases. Taking Patients! www.Medra.com Telomerase activity One step Real Time PCR assay for Telomerase activity detection www.alliedbiotechinc.com Telomerase Detection Sensitive RT PCR Assay For Direct Detection of Telomerase Activity www.ExpressBiotech.com Cell Immortalisation Range Includes TERT / SV40 Antigens Plasmids, Retro/Andenoviral vectors www.nbsbio.co.uk Astragaloside 4 Used for telomere regrowth and potential life extention cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI. HGH: Human Growth Hormone Get Lean, Build Muscle & Lose Fat. Free Shipping! Buy Two Get One Free www.HumanGrowthHormones.com Pharmagel Skin Care Parmagel - ilift skin Care Device Beautiful Gift Sets-Great Prices www.LifestyleLifestyle.com add to favorites A. Tomás-Loba, I. Flores, P.J. Fernández-Marcos, M.L. Cayuela, A. Maraver, A. Tejera, C. Borrás, A. Matheu, P. Klatt, J.M. Flores, J. Viña, M. Serrano, and M.A. Blasco QPCR microRNA Profiling Quantitate microRNA expression Comprehensive profiling service www.lcsciences.com Telomerase can confer limitless proliferative potential to human cells through its ability to elongate telomeres. However, study of telomerase in organismal aging has been complicated by its cancer-promotion effects. To circumvent this issue, Tomas et al. use mice engineered to be cancer resistant through the enhanced expression of the tumor suppressors p53, p16, and p19ARF to study the effects of telomerase expression. In this context, telomerase overexpression improves organismal fitness and produces a systemic delay in aging accompanied by life-span extension. These results demonstrate that telomerase can provide antiaging activity in mammalian organisms. Bookmark/Search this post with: delicious | digg | newsvine | furl | google | yahoo | technorati » email this page | 42 reads Cancer Basics | Cancer Forums | Cancer News | Hire a Researcher | News By Subject | The Editors | Search | Blogs | About Us | Glossary | Contact Us | Pubmed Ads by Google Telomerase Aging Process Role of P53 Reverse Aging Apoptosis Research Unbiased Cutting Edge Scientific News by Research Scientists http://cancerfocus.net/telomerase_reverse_transcriptase_delays_aging_in_cancer_resistan... 14/11/2008 Genmanipulation: Langlebige „Supermaus“ trotzt Krebs - News - FOCUS Online Página 1 de 1 Druckversion Url: http://www.focus.de/gesundheit/ratgeber/krebs/news/genmanipulation-langlebige-supermaus-trotzt-krebs_aid_348593.html 14.11.08, 15:29 Drucken Genmanipulation Langlebige „Supermaus“ trotzt Krebs Spanische Forscher haben eine genveränderte „Supermaus“ geschaffen, die länger lebt und weniger krebsanfällig ist. Grundlage für ihre Kreation sei die Rolle des „Jungbrunnen-Enzyms“ Telomerase für das Altern von Zellen, erläutert die Molekularbiologin María Blasco vom Nationalen Spanischen Krebsforschungszentrum (CNIO) in Madrid. Telomerase schützt die Zellen zwar vor Alterungsprozessen, fördert aber zugleich die Tumorbildung. Spanische Forscher haben eine Maus Bei der „Supermaus“ kombinierten die geschaffen, die langsamer altert Wissenschaftler zwei Eigenschaften: Sie veränderten die Aktivität eines Telomerase-Gens. Gleichzeitig verstärkten sie die Aktivität von drei Genen, von denen Forscher wissen, dass sie vor Krebs schützen: p53, p16 und p19ARF. Das Ergebnis waren Nagetiere, die um 40 Prozent länger leben und unempfindlicher auf Krebsauslöser reagieren als ihre Artgenossen. Die Ergebnisse ihres Experiments haben die Forscher in der USFachzeitschrift „Cell“ veröffentlicht. „Supermensch“ nicht in Sicht Am Menschen seien solche Manipulationen nicht möglich, betonte María Blasco. Die Pharmaindustrie forscht derzeit an Telomerase-Medikamenten, die Zellen langsamer altern lassen sollen. Die Telomerase ist ein Enzym, das in 90 Prozent aller Krebszellen aktiv ist. Außerdem hält es unter anderem die Keimzellen, bestimmte Haut- und Blutzellen sowie Zellen des Magen-Darm-Trakts biologisch jung: Es verhindert ihre Alterung, indem es die Schutzkappen an den Enden der Erbinformation nach jedem Vermehrungszyklus erneuert. Für gewöhnlich verkürzen sich diese sogenannten Telomere nach jeder Zellteilung. Haben sie eine kritische Länge unterschritten, stoppt die Vermehrung. Drucken Foto: dpa Copyright © 2008 by FOCUS Online GmbH http://www.focus.de/gesundheit/ratgeber/krebs/news/genmanipulation-langlebige-superm... 14/11/2008 El Tiempo - El Periódico del Pueblo Oriental www.eltiempo.com.ve Página 1 de 2 Imprimir >> TIEMPO LIBRE Científicos crean tres nuevas armas contra el cáncer Un ratón más sano y resistente al cáncer, que puede llegar a vivir un 40 por ciento más, la genómica que permitirá anticiparse a la metástasis y los avances importantes en la lucha contra los tumores oncológicos de útero constituyen noticias muy esperanzadoras para los enfermos afectados por la temible enfermedad, cada vez más cercada aunque no vencida Francisco Galindo / EFE EFE - REPORTAJES.- Un grupo de investigadores españoles lograron crear en el laboratorio un ratón más sano y resistente al cáncer, y que envejece más tarde, llegando, incluso, a vivir un 40 por ciento más que sus semejantes. En este trabajo, publicado en la revista norteamericana Cell, participaron científicos del Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas (CNIO) y un grupo de investigadores de la Universidad de Valencia. Las conclusiones del experimento pueden ser cruciales para la lucha contra el envejecimiento y la multiplicación celular anómala a causa de la presencia de un cáncer. María Blasco, autora principal de este estudio, dijo que para conseguir estos resultados se ha aumentado la telomerasa (enzima) en ratones resistentes a tumores. Aunque en las personas no se puede aumentar la cantidad de los genes, Blasco indicó que "si lo trasladáramos a los humanos sería equivalente a envejecer mucho más tarde y poder llegar a vivir hasta 120 años". Lo que se ha intentado con este experimento es entender qué es el envejecimiento y qué genes son importantes para determinar lo que vivimos, y, para ello, la aproximación científica se basa en generar ratones modificados genéticamente, como modelo, para poder entender lo que pasaría en humanos. Resistencia y longevidad La telomerasa es conocida como "la enzima de la inmortalidad", y lo que se ha estudiado en este experimento es si aumentando su cantidad se puede hacer que el ratón viva más. La relación entre los telómeros (sector terminal de la estructura del cromosoma) y el envejecimiento se conoce desde 1990 gracias a otras investigaciones. Cuanto más largos son los telómeros, más puede multiplicarse una célula (incluidas las células madre que regeneran los tejidos) y, por tanto, el organismo se mantiene joven por más tiempo. Conociendo el riesgo a desarrollar cáncer, los científicos españoles crearon por un lado, un ratón resistente a la enfermedad y, por otro, un roedor con mayor cantidad de Tert, la proteína responsable de la regeneración de los telómeros. El cruce de ambos ratones ha dado lugar a un animal cuyo organismo envejece más tarde y vive más años. En concreto, este animal presenta una buena coordinación neuromuscular a edades avanzadas, además de una mayor tolerancia a la glucosa (lo que significa menos diabetes en la vejez) y unos tejidos más sanos, como la piel y el tracto digestivo, que se mantienen jóvenes. En la actualidad, ya existen moléculas que aumentan la cantidad de telomerasa en las células y hay empresas farmacéuticas que están haciendo pruebas dirigidas a retrasar el envejecimiento de los tejidos aumentando la cantidad de la enzima mencionada. Mientras tanto, la genómica permitirá previsiblemente en el plazo de 7 ó 10 años definir el riesgo de que un cáncer de mama evolucione en metástasis al tiempo que permitirá prescribir tratamientos personalizados para cada tumor. Según el Dr. Javier Hornedo, miembro del comité organizador del simposium Tratamiento Multidisciplinario del Cáncer de Mama celebrado en Madrid, en la actualidad la tendencia apunta a aplicar la quimioterapia antes de operar la mama porque, además de reducir el tamaño del tumor, esta forma de actuar representa un modelo para ensayar los nuevos tratamientos. De esta manera, "en el plazo de 5 ó 6 meses" se puede conocer qué ha pasado en la mama con el tratamiento. Cuando una enferma está recién diagnosticada las metástasis no se ven y cuando se aplica un tratamiento después de extirpar el tumor se pierde un testigo valioso, que indica si la terapia es efectiva o no. Está demostrado que las pacientes que con la quimioterapia pre-operatoria tienen una respuesta patológica completa y en el momento de la cirugía no hay evidencia de enfermedad en la mama ni en la axila tienen una evolución buena. A juicio del experto, en un plazo de 7 ó 10 años serán capaces de saber si un tratamiento de quimioterapia va a ser efectivo y no se tratará la enfermedad "a ciegas". Para ello se obtienen impresiones moleculares de los tumores que http://www.eltiempo.com.ve/noticias/imprimir.asp?id=170914 18/11/2008 El Tiempo - El Periódico del Pueblo Oriental Página 2 de 2 permitirán saber si necesitan quimioterapia y cual va a ser efectiva. Sobre las vacunas Por último, Stanley Plotkin, el científico que desarrolló la vacuna contra la rubeola, cree que a pesar de las investigaciones para lograr una vacuna contra el cáncer "es muy temprano todavía para hablar de logros", aunque asegura que se han dado importantes avances como el tratamiento contra el cáncer del cuello de útero. Este profesor de la Universidad de Pensilvania (EEUU), considerado como un autoridad mundial en el campo de las vacunas, explica que la vacuna contra el cáncer "está en desarrollo" pero falta "mucho" para lograrla y que en la actualidad los avances llegan de tratamientos limitados a un tipo de tumor, como el del cuello de útero (cérvix), para el que se vacuna a adolescentes "aunque el futuro se hará también con las niñas". "Sabemos ya que así podemos prevenir el cáncer de cérvix y en el futuro se van a añadir más a la vacuna", dijo Plotkin. Aliada Stanley Plotkin, que también participó en el desarrollo de las vacunas contra la poliomielitis, la rabia o la varicela, aboga por la vacunación de niños e insiste en que "no hay evidencia de que se cause problemas al sistema inmunológico". Cree que el futuro de la investigación es hacerlas eficaces contra los virus del sida, el paludismo. La tuberculosis, el asma y la diarrea infantil. SI QUIERE OPINAR SOBRE EL TEMA, HAGA CLICK AQUÍ http://www.eltiempo.com.ve/noticias/imprimir.asp?id=170914 18/11/2008 Print :- Spanish scientists create 'super-mice' that live 40 per cent longer Página 1 de 1 Earthtimes.org Print this Page Close Window Spanish scientists create 'super-mice' that live 40 per cent longer Posted on : 2008-11-14 | Author : DPA News Category : Health Madrid - Spanish scientists have created "super-mice" that are cancerresistant and live up to 40 per cent longer, media reported Friday. The mice were subjected to genetic engineering by researchers from the cancer research centre CNIO and Valencia University. The key to the experiment was an enzyme called telomerase, which lengthens chromosome ends known as telomeres. Telomerase allows cells to keep dividing and is believed to increase longevity, but it also heightens the risk of cancer. The mice were genetically engineered to be cancer-resistant while the amount of telomerase in them was increased. As a result, the mice had better neuro-muscular coordination, less possibilities of developing diabetes and healthier tissues at an advanced age than ordinary mice. They also lived up to 40 per cent longer. The relation between telomeres and ageing had been known since 1990, but this was the first time that the life expectancy of an entire organism has been lengthened, Maria Blasco, director of the study, told the daily El Mundo. Similar techniques could allow humans to live 120 years, Blasco said. It was not, however, possible to apply the same method of genetic engineering to humans, she explained. The study was published by the magazine Cell. Print this Page Close Window Print Source : http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/241654,spanish-scientists-createsuper-mice-that-live-40-per-cent-longer.html © 2008 earthtimes.org. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/printstory.php?news=241654 14/11/2008 Experts make mice live 45% longer-Health/Sci-The Times of India 1 of 1 http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-3429230,prtpage-1.cms Printed from Experts make mice live 45% longer 1 Sep 2008, 0041 hrs IST, AGENCIES LONDON: Imagine living to a healthy 125 years. Well, your imagination might someday turn into reality, thanks to scientists who have made a genetic breakthrough that they claim can prolong human life and remove cancer threat. A team at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre in Madrid has based its conclusion on tests on rodents, which made them live nearly 45% longer and also left them free from tumours. According to the scientists, if the experiments on the mice can be replicated in people, human lifespan could also be extended as the genes involved exist in both rodents and humans. "The elixir of eternal youth is now not a utopian dream. The discovery opens the door to (the possibility) that humans could live 125 years and without cancer," the Daily Mail quoted lead scientist Maria Blasco as saying. In fact, the scientists achieved their results by inserting an extra copy of three genes - called telomerase, p53 and p16, already known to be important for longevity and suppressing tumours - into the stem cells of mice. Inserting an extra copy improved their function in the body because they produced more protein, which made them more active. This helped telomerase protect chromosomes from shrinking, a process which normally happens naturally as all living creatures age. And it means p53 and p16 work to prevent cells from mutating and dividing, and therefore preventing cancer, while producing a good balance of new, healthy cells -the method is "groundbreaking" as the team managed to get extra copies of both the genes into the mice. The modified mice were allowed to breed to strengthen their new DNA pattern, which created a group of "supermice" with longer lifespans and in-built cancer protection. "When activating p53 and p16 in mice, the incidence of cancer is reduced to practically zero. We don't think the mice lived longer because they had less cancer but because these genes also protected against ageing," co-scientist Manuel Serrano said. The mice are expected to live up to four-and-a-half years though their average lifespan is three years. "This is the equivalent of humans living to 125," said the scientists. Top British geneticist Aubrey de Grey called it an ‘extraordinary breakthrough' which scientists had been trying to achieve for years. He added: "The thing that makes this new is that it's the first time anyone has succeeded in manipulating the interaction between cancer and aging in a manner that actually succeeds and produces a longer lifespan in mammals than would exist without intervention." About Us | Advertise with Us | Careers @ TIL | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Sitemap Copyright © 2008 Bennett Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service This site is best viewed with Internet Explorer 6.0 or higher; Firefox 2.0 or higher at a minimum screen resolution of 1024x768 17/11/08 12:11 The Mprize-Blog Post Detail http://www.mprize.org/index.php?ctype=news&pagename=blog... Home About Us FAQ & Media The Mprize SENS Research Funding You Can Help Store Resources Meetings Telomerase expression slows aging Posted on 11-16-2008 11:59:10 by Chris Patil Original post on Ouroboros Disclaimer: Posts written for blogs other than the Methuselah Foundation Blog are written by independent authors whose opinions may not be held by the Methuselah Foundation. Login Password Remember Me: Login Register Password? The 300 For less than the cost of a cup of coffee... you can join a unique group who believe we must push harder for real anti-aging medicine. Read More... Email Updates! html Subscribe Somatic cells may divide only a limited number of times before undergoing replicative exhaustion. Originally mysterious, the Hayflick limit (named after the scientist who first characterized it) is now understood at a mechanistic level: Each time a cell divides, the telomeres (repetitive DNA sequences found at the ends of each chromosome) become shorter; critically short telomeres trigger a permanent growth arrest known as cellular senescence. (Telomere shortening is in itself a consequence of the physical limitations of template-directed DNA replication; using the inevitable shortening of chromosome ends as a kind of physiological “clock” is a wonderful example of nature making a virtue out of necessity.) Not all cells are mortal, of course: Germ line cells and the pluripotent somatic cells known as stem cells express telomerase, the enzyme the lengthens telomeres, and thereby sidestep the Hayflick limit. Stem-ness and germ-ness of a given cell aside, introducing the gene for TERT (the catalytic subunit of telomerase) appears to be sufficient to confer clonal immortality. Within a tissue, telomerase-expressing cells provide a theoretically infinite reserve of replacements for other cells that die due to tissue injury, wear and tear, or even the clonal death resulting from hitting the Hayflick limit. Expressing telomerase in a wide variety of somatic cells would therefore seem a tempting strategy for lifespan extension. Specifically, telomerase expression could prevent any age-related decline in tissue function can be attributed to decreased regenerative potential. We know why this is a non-starter, of course. Telomerase is tightly repressed in most somatic cells, and for a very good reason: What do you call a cell with an unlimited division potential that’s not a stem cell or germ cell? Usually “cancer.” Even for a tumor cell that has overcome the senescence checkpoints, the physical rules of DNA replication still apply, and telomeres will shorten every division until the cell is eating into its own coding DNA. Therefore, it’s essential for an ambitious young cancer cell to find a way to lengthen its own telomeres; indeed, this problem is significant enough that it’s considered one of the major steps in tumor progression. In any case, an organism with widespread telomerase expression in its somatic cells would very likely find itself dealing with multiple neoplasias — hardly the right animal in which to ask questions about division potential and lifespan. But what if cancer couldn’t form for other reasons? In such a case, we could test the hypothesis that increased regenerative capacity confers increased lifespan. That’s precisely what a multi-lab collaboration from Spain has done; they find that mice that express TERT in most of their cells live significantly longer than the wildtype. From Tomás-Loba et al.: Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase Delays Aging in Cancer-Resistant Mice Telomerase confers limitless proliferative potential tomost human cells through its 1 of 2 17/11/08 10:36 The Mprize-Blog Post Detail http://www.mprize.org/index.php?ctype=news&pagename=blog... ability to elongate telomeres, the natural ends of chromosomes, which otherwise would undergo progressive attrition and eventually compromise cell viability. However, the role of telomerase in organismal aging has remained unaddressed, in part because of the cancer-promoting activity of telomerase. To circumvent this problem, we have constitutively expressed telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT), one of the components of telomerase, in mice engineered to be cancer resistant by means of enhanced expression of the tumor suppressors p53, p16, and p19ARF. In this context, TERT overexpression improves the fitness of epithelial barriers, particularly the skin and the intestine, and produces a systemic delay in aging accompanied by extension of the median life span. These results demonstrate that constitutive expression of Tert provides antiaging activity in the context of a mammalian organism. In mice expressing higher levels of three different tumor suppressors, cancer is essentially unable to form (one way to think about it is that tumors are delayed longer than the lifespan of the animal). In these animals, TERT indeed confers increased regenerative capacity and a significant increase in median lifespan. Two questions, of many that one might raise: First, why is the effect only on median lifespan? Inspection of the figures in the paper reveals that the cancer-resistant/TERT-expressing mice have a 50% survival time that is 20-30% longer than the wildtype — but by the time all of the oldest wildtype animals have died, so have all of the painstakingly engineered mutants. The clear implication is that exhaustion of regenerative potential is more relevant to early-life mortality than late-life mortality — counterintuitive, because one would expect regenerative failure to get progressively worse as a function of time, and to make an increasingly important contribution to mortality later in life. Second: Mouse cells have really long telomeres, and telomerase expression is widespread in mouse tissues (though not usually at high enough levels to prevent some telomere shortening at every cell division). It takes mouse TERT knockouts around four generations of homozygosity to even begin to see a phenotype. Granted, mouse generations are far shorter than mouse lifespans, so this is not the same as saying that it takes four lifetimes for TERT to make a difference, or for replicatively senescent cells to begin to appear within a given mouse. But still, it makes me wonder what’s going on. Could telomerase be doing something else — i.e., something other than lengthening telomeres — that is particularly important in determining median lifespan? The Methuselah Foundation is a charitable 501(c)(3) organization; its IRS tax identification number is 54-2040344. Mprize and Methuselah Foundation are registered trademarks of the Methuselah Foundation. PO Box 1143, Lorton, VA, 22199-1143, Ph. (202) 306-0989 main@methuselahfoundation.org 2 of 2 17/11/08 10:36 Zellen gegen das Altern entdeckt: Gesundheit aktuell Página 1 de 2 News-Archiv Zellen gegen das Altern entdeckt Spanische Forscher vom Nationalen Spanischen Krebsforschungszentrum (CNIO) in Madrid haben eine genveränderte Maus geschaffen, die länger lebt und weniger krebsanfällig ist. Hauptbestandteil der Arbeit war die Rolle des Enzyms Telomerase. Die Telomerase schützen die Zellen vor dem Altern, fördern aber zugleich die Tumorbildung. Die Forscher kombinierten nun zwei Eigenschaften. Sie veränderten die Aktivität eines Telomerase-Gens und verstärkten zugleich die Arbeit mehrerer Gene, die vor Krebs schützen. Das Ergebnis ist: Die Mäuse leben um 40 Prozent länger und sind unempfindlicher gegen Krebsauslöser. Beim Menschen sind solche Manipulationen noch nicht möglich. Die Industrie forscht zur zeit an Telomerase-Medikamenten, die kürzer gewordene Telomere in den Zellen nachwachsen lassen sollen. Die Zellen altern dann langsamer. Wann Medikamente dieser Art auf den Markt kommen steht noch nicht fest. <- Zurück zu: News-Archiv Seite weiterempfehlen Artikel Drucken Nach oben Augenheilkunde Gastroenterologie Gesundes Wohlbefinden Gesundheit für die Frau Gesundheit für den Mann Gesundes Wohnen Homöopathie Kids und mehr Naturheilkunde Osteopathie http://www.gesundheit-aktuell.de/news-archiv/archive/2008/november/18/artikel/zelle... 18/11/2008 'Supermice' That can Resist Cancer and Ageing Developed Página 1 de 1 Web Medindia Advanced Search Hyperthermia in Frankfurt Extreme heat damages cancer cells A gentle biological cancer therapy www.hyperthermie-zentrum.de Ads by Google Robotic prostate surgery Minimally invasive robotic surgery Saint Joseph's Hospital in Atlanta. www.StJosephsAtlanta.org/ Parkinson News Leukemia Symptoms Pink Ribbon Store Purchases help fund mammograms. Free Pink Ribbon Pin! Pay S/H only. www.TheBreastCancerSite.com Symptoms of Diabetes Breast Cancer Alternative Medicine. Protocols. Testimonia www.tumorx.com Psoriasis Symptoms Aut 'Supermice' That can Resist Cancer and Ageing Developed In a breakthrough study, Spanish scientists have created a genetically modified 'supermice' that can resist cancer and which age almost half as fast as other mice. The research team from Valencia University modified the genes of the mice to make them resistant to cancer and slow down aging by increasing the amount of a particular protein called telomerase. The protein helps cells to regenerate, allowing them to stay younger for longer. Previous studies had shown that attempts to increase the amount of the protein in mice made them more vulnerable to cancer. In the new study, the researchers modified the genes of the mice in such away that made it resistant to the disease. The resulting mice were found to have better muscle in old age, healthier skin tissue and fewer digestion problems. The mice aged 40 per cent slower than those whose genes have not been modified. "By simultaneously increasing the amounts of telomerase and the resistance to cancer we are able to delay ageing in mice and also to extend their life span by 40 per cent," the Telegraph quoted Maria A. Blasco, lead researcher from the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO). "These mice get to live for as long as the eldest mice in records of the same kind, "If we were to parallel it to humans, then it would mean reaching 120 years of age and also to start ageing much later in life," she added. Source-ANI SRM Print this Document Last Updated - November 18, 2008-Designed & Content Managed by Medindia Health Network Pvt Ltd. Hosted & Technical Breast Cance Alternative Me TumorX Proto Testimonials. www.tumorx.com Disease Path Analysis Find targets a biomarkers, b pathways. Fre demo. www.ariadnegeno Virtual Colon News For VC and ra professionals information re VC VirtualColonosco 94% of Docto Know That you can IV Cancer w/o Chemotherap Radiation www.CancerTruth Pharmatest S Fast and relia preclinical pharmacodyn research serv www.pharmatest. Support by Front Point Systems Disclaimer - The contents of this site are for informational purposes only. Always seek the advice of a qualified physician for any doubts. To Read full Disclaimer Click Here! Advertise with us | Medindia Copyright | Privacy Policy © All Rights Reserved 1997 - 2008 http://www.medindia.net/news/view_main_print_new.asp 18/11/2008 Udany test eliksiru długowieczności - Ciekawostki - Fakty w INTERIA.PL Página 1 de 1 Udany test eliksiru długowieczności Poniedziałek, 17 listopada (06:31) Odporną na nowotwory supermysz stworzyli hiszpańscy naukowcy. Przy okazji udało się gryzoniowi przedłuży Gdyby tę samą terapię zastosować wobec ludzi, przeciętna długość naszego życia wyniosłaby 120 lat, donosi Maria A. Blasco z hiszpańskiego Narodowego Centrum Badań nad Rakiem (CNIO) oraz jej uczeni koledzy z uniwersyt zmodyfikowali geny supermyszy, że ta przestała być podatna na raka. Przy okazji genetycznie zwiększono w organizm zwanego telomerazą, od którego zależne jest, jak szybko zużywają się komórki. Spowodowało to, że ciało supermyszy o połowę wolniej niż organizm gryzoni, których struktury genowej nie modyfikowano. Od połowy lat 90. zeszłego wieku uczeni wiedzą, że sekret starzenia się naszego organizmu ukryty jest w proteinie zw Enzym ten wspomaga regenerację komórek, pozwalając ciału być długo młodym. Niestety wraz z wiekiem telomeraza słabiej aktywuje procesy odmładzania komórek. Wcześniejsze manipulacje przy telomerazie myszy (skłaniające ją do u okazały się nieudane, bo namnażanie tego białka sprzyjało też powstawaniu nowotworów. Aktywność enzymu wydłuża bowiem z reguły znacznie większa w szybko rozrastających się komórkach rakowych. Z raportu opublikowanego w magazynie naukowym "Cell" wynika, że modyfikowana genetycznie mysz w starszym wie mięśnie, zdrowszą skórę i sprawniej działający układ trawienia. - Przez jednoczesne zwiększenie ilości telomerazy i odporności na raka byliśmy w stanie obronić mysz przed starzenie o 40 proc. - twierdzi Maria A. Blasco z CNIO. Przy okazji sam początek procesu starzenia się organizmu mocno opóźniono, czyli wydłużono dojrzały, w pełni sprawn Koleżanka Hiszpanki ze Stanów Zjednoczonych, Rita Effors z University of California, stara się z kolei zmusić telomera aktywności nie modyfikacjami genowymi, ale wyciągiem z korzeni rośliny o nazwie traganek. Zioło to od dawna jest wy chińską medycynę tradycyjną do pobudzania układu odpornościowego. W Polsce dziko rośnie około dziesięciu odmian Astrogalus). Ekstrakt z traganka wytwarzany jako lek o nazwie TAT2 przez firmę Geron Corporation z Kalifornii spowalnia skracanie wydłuża zdolność komórek do podziału i wzmaga odporność antywirusową. Rita Effors uważa, że środek TAT2 nie tylko aktywuje telomerazę i wydłuża życie, ale może również skutecznie walczy przyjmowany jako suplement razem z lekami antywirusowymi. Wielkim zwolennikiem i propagatorem badań nad telomerazą jest Aubrey de Grey z Fundacji Matuzalema, który od lat przyszłe pokolenia będą żyć znacznie dłużej niż obecnie. - To jest coś, co niesie nam nadzieję. Uważamy, że kiedyś uda nam się tak zaktywować telomerazę w komórkach, że w funkcjonowania komórek. I nasze życie - komentuje ostatnie badania nad telomerazą de Grey. Odmładzanie psów metodą terapii genowej niebawem zaproponują kliniki weterynaryjne w USA. - Jesteśmy już w osta wszelkich zezwoleń. Genowa kuracja poprawy siły mięśni, witalności i wytrzymałości u leciwych psów przeszła już prób Lee Sweeney z University of Pennsylvania. Pies na życzenie swego właściciela otrzyma do wątroby zastrzyk składnika w genach produkcję myostatyny. To białko hamujące u ludzi i zwierząt przyrost mięśni. Ta sama metoda mogłaby być użyta do leczenia ludzi chorych np. na dystrofię mięśni. INTERIA.PL/Polska Copyright © 1999-2008 INTERIA.PL S.A. Wszystkie prawa zastrzeżone. Korzystanie z portalu oznacza akceptację http://fakty.interia.pl/ciekawostki/news/udany-test-eliksiru-dlugowiecznosci,1211976,... 18/11/2008 'Supermuizen' leven langer - FOK! 1 of 1 http://frontpage.fok.nl/nieuws/print/102582 'Supermuizen' leven langer Gepost door: Pieter (Chancard) Bron: De Morgen, Telegraph.co.uk Gepubliceerd op: vrijdag 14 november 2008 @ 21:02 op frontpage.fok.nl Spaanse wetenschappers zijn erin geslaagd 'supermuizen' te creëren. De genetisch gemanipuleerde muizen zijn bestand tegen kanker en leven langer dan hun niet-gemanipuleerde soortgenoten. Een enzyme genaamd telomerase speelt een centrale rol in het experiment. Telomerase zorgt ervoor dat de uiteinden van chromosomen verlengd worden. Daardoor kunnen cellen langer blijven delen, wat de leeftijd van de muizen zou moeten verlengen. Wetenschappers moesten echter ook vaststellen dat muizen die blootgesteld werden aan grotere hoeveelheden telomerase sneller kanker ontwikkelen. Nu hebben wetenschappers van het Spaanse instituut voor kankeronderzoek CNIO de muizen eerst door middel van genetische manipulatie resistent gemaakt tegen kanker voor ze het onderzoek uitvoerden. Het is al geruime tijd bekend dat muizen immuun kunnen gemaakt worden tegen kanker. Het resultaat: de muizen zijn resistent tegen kanker en leven tot veertig procent langer. "Gelijkaardige technieken zouden ervoor kunnen zorgen dat mensen 120 jaar oud worden", aldus een van de onderzoekers. Het is echter voorlopig nog niet mogelijk om dezelfde methode voor genetische manipulatie toe te passen op mensen, legde ze uit. © 1999-2008 FOK! 17/11/08 12:12 Vilt 1 of 1 http://www.vilt.be/nieuwsarchief/print.phtml?id=19971 Transgene supermuis leeft helft langer 15/11/2008 Spaanse wetenschappers zijn erin geslaagd een 'supermuizen' te creëren die niet alleen gegarandeerd kankervrij zijn maar ook voor bijna de helft langer leven dan hun soortgenoten. Als de levensduur van deze genetisch gemanipuleerde muizen in mensenleeftijd wordt omgezet, worden ze 120 jaar. De muizen kwamen tot stand dankzij de samenwerking van specialisten uit het Spaanse Instituut voor Kankerstudies en hun collega's van de universiteit van Valencia. De vorsers wijzigden eerst de genen van de muizen om ze resistent te maken tegen kanker. Daarna verhoogden ze bij de diertjes de hoeveelheid van het speciale enzymn telomerase dat de veroudering van cellen kan tegengaan. Daardoor werd hun verouderingsproces met veertig procent vertraagd omdat het enzym hun cellen herstelde zodat ze langer 'jong' bleven. De nieuw gecreëerde muizen blijken nu op gevorderde leeftijd betere spieren te hebben, een gezonder huidweefsel en een betere stofwisseling. Het positieve resultaat is een veertig procent langere levensduur. Teamleidster van de vorsers, Maria Blasco: "Onze resultaten bij muizen zullen ook de schoonheidsindustrie interesseren, want die is zeer geboeid door de mogelijkheden van het enzym telomerase om ouderdomsverschijnselen te behandelen".(KS) Bron: Het Belang van Limburg Eerdere berichtgeving over transgene dieren: 23/9/08: FDA werkt aan regels voor transgene landbouwdieren 17/11/08 12:09 Spaanse wetenschappers creëren 'supermuizen' | Gezondheid.blog.nl 2 of 4 http://gezondheid.blog.nl/actualiteiten/2008/11/15/spaanse-wetenschappe... Spaanse wetenschappers creëren 'supermuizen' 15 November 2008 11:49: Sonja Crielaard De medische wetenschap kan enorm veel en soms vind ik dat een beetje eng. Als ik lees dat Spaanse wetenschappers erin geslaagd zijn om ‘supermuizen’ te creëren, die bestand zijn tegen kanker en 40% langer leven, dan weet ik niet of we daar blij mee moeten zijn. De sleutel van het experiment was een enzyme met de naam telomerase. Hierdoor worden de uiteinden van de chromosomen verlengd. Daardoor kunnen cellen blijven delen en dat zou ervoor zorgen dat de levensduur wordt verlengd. Het risico op kanker wordt hierdoor echter wel groter. De muizen werden daarom genetisch gemanipuleerd om bestand te zijn tegen kanker. Volgens de onderzoekers kunnen gelijkaardige technieken ervoor zorgen dat mensen 120 jaar oud kunnen worden. Godzijdank was het niet mogelijk – zo lieten de onderzoekers weten – om dezelfde methode voor genetische manipulatie toe te passen op mensen…… Andere Blog.nl berichten 'Aanvullende verzekering vaak overbodig' Moet je een siliconen injectable masseren? Inspiratie voor een feestelijke kerstoutfit deel 5 Voedingscentrum start SuperShopper voor kinderen Liever geen dikke verkoper Wat is griep ook alweer? Run op ooglaseren Inspiratie voor een feestelijke kerstoutfit deel 4 de Week van de Kanker Het moet vet, cool en sexy zijn Ook eens naar een premiere als ster? De grootste film hit! Win een nieuwe Hyundai i20 Investigate i20: ga op zoek naar de verborgen kenmerken van de Hyundai i20. Bron: hln.be Heb jij Gezondheid.blog nog steeds niet toegevoegd aan je Google homepage of Reader? Klik hier! (1) Reacties | Totaal lezers online - 1220 Volgende Vorige | [Stuur artikel door] | [Link] Poll Roken op school moet worden verboden Ja! Ja, maar alleen voor leerlingen Nee Stem Deze week HOT op Gezondheid! 'Rijken' eerder aan de beurt in Haarlems ... Arts wil meisje (13) tot harttransplantatie ... Beetje buikvet al ongezond 'Zwangere man' weer in verwachting ADV: Doe de test! Cholesterolverlagers mogelijk effectiever ... 'Ziekenhuizen onzorgvuldig met medische ... Ondanks gebruik pil of condoom tóch zwanger!? Spaanse wetenschappers creëren 'supermuizen' Vrouw krijgt gezonde baby na ... Zoeken Zoeken Recente Reacties Op www.ooglasertrefpunt.nl vindt u... Mag ik even overgeven op Cees Renkers,... 17/11/08 12:08 TVNET - Investigadores criam rato resistente ao cancro Página 1 de 1 ACESS O À INTERNET | MAIL | MESSENGER | VÍDEOS | VIAGENS | COMPRAS | IMÓVEIS | CLASSIFICADOS Sexta, 14 de Novembro de 2008 NATO pede mudanças no Afeganistão Todas Definir como Homepage Pesquisar... Assaltava bancos de óculos escuros e de chapéu Pesquisa SAPO BP vai descer o preço da gasolina em 2 cêntimos Investigadores criam rato resistente ao cancro A investigação tornou os ratos mais resistentes ao cancro e com capacidade de viver até mais tarde. 17:11 NATO pede mudanças no Afeganistão 16:53 Assaltava bancos de óculos escuros e de chap... 16:47 BP vai descer o preço da gasolina em 2 cênti... 16:34 Sporting preparado para conquistar três pont... Um grupo de investigadores espanhóis, criaram um rato resistente ao cancro, mais saudável e com capacidade de viver 40% a mai s do que os outros. Neste trabalho, publicado na revista norte americana Cell, participaram cientistas do Centro Nacional de Investigações Oncológicos (CNIO) e um grupo de investigadores valencianos. Maria Blasco, principal autora do estudo explicou que, para conseguir estes resultados, aumentou a enzi ma Telomersa resistente ao cancro. 16:22 Príncipe Carlos vai ter festa "cigana" 16:10 Paulo Bento: "Não fui notificado sobre proce... 15:59 as noticias do mundo 15:41 Haaretz: "Barak aprovou expansão de colonato... 15:35 Pete Rende e Matt Pavolka em Espinho domingo 15:26 Sexo ajuda homens a adormecer Mais Notícias "Aumentámos a q uantidade de Telomerasa e também a quantidade de genes que os p rotegem contra o cancro" afirmou a investigadora do CNIO. Nas pessoas não é possível aumentar a quantidade dos genes protectores, " se fosse possível efectuá-lo nos humanos, nós po deríamos envelhecer muito mais tarde e chegar a viver até aos 120 anos", afirmou Maria Blasco. TV Net Comente esta notícia Faça o post desta notícia Partilhe esta notícia Sporting preparado para conquistar três pontos Paulo Bento: "Não fui notificado sobre processo" as noticias do mundo 1ª mão - Composição do Governo Regional dos Açores Meo - O comando é meu Chegou uma nova experiência de Tv, num serviço com Internet e voz! www.meo.pt Medicina com qualidade Pocura informação sobre medicina na Net? Consulte este site! www.mgfamiliar.net Teste o seu Qi! Meça a sua inteligência e compare o resultado com os seus amigos! www.qi-testeeuropeu.com Haelan 951 Comércio de Produtos Naturais Quer melhorar a sua saúde? www.haelanportugal.com Empresa :: Serviços :: Ficha técnica :: Publicidade :: Trabalhar Connosco :: FAQ :: Editorial :: Contactos :: Mapa do site © 2007 Todos os direitos reservados - Design Shazam | Política de Privacidade http://www.tvnet.pt/noticias/detalhes.php?id=36687 14/11/2008 En humanos, eso supondrнa extender la vida media hasta los 115 o 120 aсos Página 1 de 2 dictionary | keyboard | login | register | online News Home • News • Yellow Pages • Shopping • Classifieds • Fun • Chat • Forum • America russian | english En humanos, eso supondrнa extender la vida media hasta los 115 o 120 aсos 14 Nov 2008 raiting (0/0) viewed (6) Un equipo de especialistas del Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncolуgicas (CNIO) ha dado un paso que puede ser clave para lograr vivir durante mбs tiempo y en buenas condiciones fнsicas, retrasando los achaques propios de la edad. Estos expertos han conseguido crear en laboratorio ratones que viven hasta un 40% mбs que sus congйneres, y tardan mбs tiempo en envejecer. El mйtodo empleado por los cientнficos del CNIO, liderados por Marнa Blasco, para obtener estos roedores consiste en aumentar los niveles de una enzima, la telomerasa, que incrementa la capacidad reproductora de las cйlulas gracias a su habilidad para alargar los telуmeros, los extremos finales de los cromosomas (que son 40 en el ratуn y 46 en el ser humano). Desde principios de los aсos 90 se sabe que existe una estrecha relaciуn entre los telуmeros y el envejecimiento. Su longitud se va reduciendo con cada nueva replicaciуn celular. Cuando los telуmeros finalmente desaparecen, las cйlulas pierden la capacidad de reproducirse y el organismo envejece sin remedio. Pero la telomerasa tambiйn tiene la propiedad, unida a la acciуn de determinados genes, de facilitar el desarrollo del cбncer. Por eso, los investigadores tambiйn aumentaron en los ratones el nъmero de genes resistentes al cбncer. El resultado fue un ratуn sano y que viviу un 40% mбs que los demбs. Blasco considera "muy probable" que los resultados con ratones sean extrapolables a humanos. "Eso significarнa aumentar la vida media de los humanos hasta los 115 o 120 aсos. Ese tiempo extra de vida serнa, ademбs, saludable", asegura la investigadora. Source: consumer.es News Sections l politics l business l people l events l scientific news l culture l technology l sports l other news Russian Women For serious relationship only. Join now (it's free). TAU2.com Русское Интернет ТВ&Радио Русское Телевидение без тарелки и кабеля. 60 каналов 14,95€/месяц. www.kartina.tv Free Russian Translation Translate Single Words & Full Text In 1 Click. Get Your Free Download! Babylon.com Russian Usa Latest World News from the International sourceFT.com FT.com Russia's Hot Stocks Russia is waking up from it's cold sleep and looks to be a profit play MoneyMorning.com/russia Home • News • Yellow Pages • Shopping • Classifieds • Fun • Chat • Forum • America http://www.rususa.com/news/print.asp-nid-37709-lang-en 14/11/2008 Będziemy żyli dłużej? Mysz już może - Michałki - Informacje - portal TVN24.pl - ... TVN24.pl WIDEO INFORMACJE Najważniejsze Kontakt TVN24 ZUMI WIDEO Najnowsze FOTO FAKTY Polska NA ŻYWO Świat Michałki PROGRAM Sport TERAZ M Biznes Me Kanały RSS 01:14, 15.11.2008 Pożar w centrum Warszawy (film: Lester24) Página 1 de 8 Tagi: zwierzęta, nauk Będziemy żyli dłużej? Mysz już może NAUKOWCY DWUKROTNIE PRZEDŁUŻYLI ŻYCIE GRYZONIOWI Około sto osób ewakuowano z biurowca Atrium w Warszawie... Kierowca wpadł do sklepu. Dosłownie (film: Internauta Jakub) Jedna osoba została ranna w wypadku, do którego doszło... Naukowcy dwukrotnie przedłużyli życie gryzoniowi Doszczętnie spłonęła hala tartaku Potężny pożar w Stradomii Wierzchniej na Dolnym Śląsku.... Szkło kontaktowe Naukowcy stworzyli "supermysz" - zwierzę odporne na raka i żyjące prawie dwa razy dłużej, niż normalni przedstawiciele gatunku. Gdyby pracowali nad "superczłowiekiem" żyłby on 120 lat! Na początku badacze zmodyfikowali geny myszy powodując, że stała się ona odporna na nowotwory. Gdy już tego dokonali, genetycznie zwiększyli ilość białka - telomerazy - w organizmie zwierzęcia, które spowalnia "starzenie się" komórek. Rezultatem jest mysz starzejąca się o 40 proc. wolniej niż myszy niezmodyfikowane. "Enzym młodości" Koledzy z opozycji Wspólny głos Grzegorza Napieralskiego i Sebastiana... Fot. archiwum Telomeraza-enzym rybonukleoproteinowy jest (w ogromnym uproszczeniu) białkiem związanym z procesem starzenia się komórek. Każdy chromosom w komórce zakończony jest tzw. telomerem. Gdy komórka się dzieli, telomery się skracają aż do momentu, gdy nie jest to możliwe i komórka umiera. Mysz otrzymała dodatkową telomerazę, w ten sposób dobudowano odcinek nici DNA, pomagając komórkom regenerować się. Jeśli by przełożyć wyniki badania na ludzi, oznaczało by to osiągnięcie wieku 120 lat i opóźnienie rozpoczęcia starzenia się. Maria A. Blasco, Narodowe Centrum Badań nad Nowotworami w Hiszpanii (CNIO) http://www.tvn24.pl/26086,1573053,0,1,bedziemy-zyli-dluzej-mysz-juz-moze,wiado... 18/11/2008 Będziemy żyli dłużej? Mysz już może - Michałki - Informacje - portal TVN24.pl - ... Uosobienie niewinności Poseł Sławomir Nitras nic nie wie o marihuanie. Tylko... Zawieszenie broni? Tematy referatów, które Janusz Palikot chce wygłosić w... Niestety, wraz ze wzrostem ilości enzymu, laboratoryjne myszy stawały się bardziej podatne na nowotwory (u chorych na raka poziom telomerazy jest podwyższony). Dlatego zanim zaaplikowano zwierzętom białko, uodporniono je na raka. Eksperyment został opublikowany w czasopiśmie Cell. Página 2 de 8 Wyleczyli chorego z HIV Przeszczepiony szpik kostny uleczył pacjenta zakażonego wirusem HIV. Doktor... czytaj więcej » Nowa mysz Myszy "stworzone" przez badaczy miały lepsze mięśnie mimo zaawansowanego wieku, zdrowszą skórę i mniej problemów z trawieniem pożywienia. - Podnosząc jednocześnie ilość telomerazy i odporność na nowotwory, byliśmy w stanie przedłuży życie myszy o 40 procent - powiedziała Maria A. Blasco z hiszpańskiego Narodowego Centrum Badań nad Nowotworami (CNIO), która prowadziła badanie wraz z zespołem z Uniwersytetu w Walencji. - Te myszy żyły tyle, ile najstarsi przedstawiciele tego gatunku. Blasco wierzy, że odkrycie może być szczególnie interesujące dla przemysłu kosmetycznego. Badania trwają Ciężkie życie opozycji O tym, na co narażeni są posłowie opozycji opowiada... "Supermysz" z Hiszpanii nie jest jednak pierwszym tego typu dokonaniem. W 2007 roku naukowcy z Uniwersytetu w Kentucky (USA) ogłosili stworzenie myszy odpornej na najbardziej złośliwe typy nowotworów (za pomocą genu "Par-4"). Stwierdzili wtedy, że istnieje szansa na przełom w leczeniu nowotworów za pomocą zmodyfikowanego genetycznie szpiku kostnego. Od myszy do supermyszy Pierwszą uodpornioną na raka mysz stworzono już pod koniec XX wieku. sm/iga Zaraźliwość Andrzej Lepper przejmuje pałeczkę podczas Magazynu 24... Więcej na ten temat Oceń wagę: Twój pies głosowałby na Obamę Średnia waga: Terier Busha pogryzł dziennikarza Tylko małpa trafnie typuje Owca z dwiema głowami Powiadom znajomego Drukuj artykuł Komorowski kokietuje Marszałek Komorowski nie chce zdradzić swoich planów... Nowe wideo Podyskutuj (38) Ma dwa imiona, bo ma dwie głowy + Dodaj komentarz 16.11.2008 | ~prześmiewca Podstawą jest by się nie przejadać, oddychać powietrzem a ... ... nie gazem wielkomiejskim i unikać pożywienia ekologicznego promowanego jako "zdrowa żywność", ponieważ w tej nazwie kryje się odwrotność. Nie słuchać ... Zobacz wszystki Uwięziona w mieszkaniu Miało nie być barier. Tak przynajmniej zapewniali panią... http://www.tvn24.pl/26086,1573053,0,1,bedziemy-zyli-dluzej-mysz-juz-moze,wiado... 18/11/2008