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Age Accelerator

  • 작성자한진
  • 작성일2006-03-15 00:26:44
  • 조회수2636
03.14.06 Is aging caused by a bunch of genetic typos? Genetics researchers have shown that turning off the body's spell-checker accelerates aging. This ScienCentral News video explains. Why We Age Why do we age? This may seem like a silly question. The more you drive, the less tread there is on your tires — simple wear-and-tear. Why should our bodies be any different? But would you still expect your tires to need replacing every 40,000 miles if they had a built-in system that sensed when rubber wore off and then re-grew it according to an internal blueprint? That kind of repair is similar to what actually happens in our bodies, except the systems that keep us running smoothly are mind-bogglingly complicated and follow the instructions coded by our DNA. Old cells die and get replaced by new ones, virally infected cells commit suicide, DNA gets copied and spell-checked — theoretically, we should look and feel eighteen forever, yet we don't. Which failures in this system lead to aging, and why? Figuring that out is not just a matter of identifying the causes of wear-and-tear damage. Genetics researchers led by Tom Prolla at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have gotten closer to understanding exactly why we age by looking at what happens in mice genetically altered to age faster. The fast-aging mice display all the typical signs of human aging: hair loss, graying, loss of hearing, decreased muscle mass, and general frailty. At the beginning of their lives the mice looked just like their normal counterparts, but by around nine months of age (the equivalent of 30 human years), they were physically like mouse-grandparents. "These mice age very fast, about three times faster than normal," Prolla says. Normal and aged mice As they reported in the journal Science, all of these physical changes were the result of a small change Prolla's team made to one gene in the mice's mitochondrial DNA. "Mitochondria are very important for our cells because that's where we get all, or most, of our energy," he explains. These tiny energy factories are found in every cell of our bodies, but unlike any other cell sub-structures, mitochondria have their own DNA. Each time a cell copies its DNA in preparation to divide, the mitochondria in the cell also copy their own small genomes. Then, when the cell splits in two, each daughter cell gets an identical copy of both the mitochondrial and the cellular sets of DNA. The gene that the team modified is the mitochondrial PolgA gene, which contains instructions for making the enzyme DNA polymerase gamma. This enzyme is normally responsible for copying and spell-checking mitochondrial DNA. The team changed just two letters, or bases, of the gene's DNA code. "We altered two bases in the gene and made it defective so that it can now function in the copying of the DNA but can no longer function as a spell-checker," Prolla explains. "As a result of that, the mitochondrial DNA accumulates mutations." The researchers concluded that this increased number of mutations (3 to 8 times as many as in normal mice) was the reason for the increased rate of cell-suicide that they observed in the fast-aging animals. Because of those mutations, cells that make up many parts of the body — from hair to bone to muscle — prematurely committed suicide. Another popular theory of human aging is called the "free radical theory." Free radicals are chemicals that accumulate in our cells from the environment that can react with and damage DNA. Prolla's team measured the levels of a common free radical in the normal and mutant mice at different ages — but they found no difference. This led the team to conclude that the higher rate of cell death could cause aging even in the absence of free radicals. Prolla says that this is the first time that programmed cell death has clearly been linked to aging. Prolla thinks that this premature cell death likely destroys stem cells, which cannot easily be replaced. "Once they're lost, the tissues which they support will no longer be able to regenerate," he says. "So the loss of stem cells is probably a critical feature of accelerated aging." The team's next step is to test whether interventions can slow down how rapidly these mice age. "This is a very important finding because it suggests ways which one can interfere in the aging process. For example, replacing lost stem cells," Prolla explains. He also suspects that there are other genes in mitochondria that can prolong life. So who knows — we may well be on our way to eternal youth. With all these clues as to why our repair systems fail, it looks like at the very least, future technologies will include ways to prolong our lives. Unfortunately, though, our tires will probably continue to need regular replacing. Prolla's research was published in the July 15, 2005 issue of Science, and was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association.
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No. 제목 작성자 작성일 조회수
16 "old" mice가 노화에서 key로서 작용한다. 2005.01.26 문혜진 2005.01.26 2,078
15 프로테오믹스 연구의 최신동향과 활용 첨부파일 2005.01.25 주현 2005.01.25 2,020
14 연구와 마켓 - nanobiotechnmologes applications, 마켓 그리고 회사들 2005.01.25 이현숙 2005.01.25 1,999
13 스웨덴 과학자들이 부분적으로 노화의 미스테리를 풀었다. 2005.01.25 이현숙 2005.01.25 2,120
12 STKE : the mitochondria으로부터의 칼슘 신호전달 2005.01.25 이현숙 2005.01.25 2,436
11 drug의 힘 2005.01.25 이현숙 2005.01.25 2,034
10 MFIC의 microfluidizer procesor는 thechnion에서 Mitochondrial 연구를 운행한다. 2005.01.25 이현숙 2005.01.25 3,049
9 Primagen은 과학적인 연구 사용을 위한 Retina Mitox Mitochondrial(TM) DNA Blood Test로 진단하는 탐색법을 제공한다. 2005.01.25 이현숙 2005.01.25 2,082
8 노화에서 유전자 손상의 중요 인자 첨부파일 2005.01.25 김현주 2005.01.25 1,706
7 미토콘드리아와 장수 첨부파일 2005.01.25 김현주 2005.01.25 1,740
6 미토콘드리아와 당뇨병의 관계 첨부파일 2005.01.25 김현주 2005.01.25 1,695
5 새로운 과학 분야는 세상에서 가장 치명적인 퇴행성 질환의 치료에 주력하고 있다. 첨부파일 2005.01.25 김현주 2005.01.25 1,819
4 apoptosis에 있어서 세포의 mitochondria의 역할 첨부파일 2005.01.25 이영숙 2005.01.25 2,813
3 mitochondrial DNA mutation이 혈압과 콜레스테롤 수치에 직접적으로 영향을 미친다. 2005.01.25 이영숙 2005.01.25 2,516
2 미토콘드리아 DNA변이와 노호의 관계 2005.01.25 이영숙 2005.01.25 1,951
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