You are currently browsing the Anti-Aging Firewalls weblog archives for the day 22. January 2009.
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- 26. July 2010: Turning P53 on in cancer cells
- 22. July 2010: Diabetes Part 2: Lifestyle, dietary and supplement interventions
- 19. July 2010: Diabetes Part I: Biology and molecular dynamics of diabetes
- 12. July 2010: Alzheimer’s disease studies validate anti-aging firewalls suggestions
- 10. July 2010: Induced pluripotent stem cells - developments on the road to big-time utilization
- 6. July 2010: Three years exploring longevity science
- 3. July 2010: HSP70 to the rescue
- 28. June 2010: AMPK and longevity
- 25. June 2010: Stress, exercise and telomere lengths
- 23. June 2010: Humanin, health and aging
Archive for 22. January 2009
This week’s anti-aging news Jan 22, 2009.
22. January 2009 by admin.
Looks line our old friends telomeres, caps at the ends of chromosomes, are showing up in new contexts all over the place. Theory 12 in the Anti-Aging Firewalls treatise, you will recall, is that aging is measured if not caused by shortening of the telomere caps due to progressive cell divisions throughout life. When the caps get too short with age the cell can no longer reliably reproduce so it dies or settles into grumpy senescence or does evil stuff like causing cancers. This week, it is reported that defects in a single gene related to telomere length and stability leads to susceptibility to at least five different kinds of cancers. The cancers involved include basal cell carcinoma, melanoma and cancers of the lung, bladder, prostate and cervix.
Perhaps the greatest historical strides in population longevity have been related to public health - sewage systems, cleaner water, sanitation measures and the like. A recent study by Harvard School of Public Health and Brigham Young University researchers points to the importance of good air quality. It appears that improvements in air quality in the US, particularly in cities, added about five months to life expectancy in the U.S. over twenty years. I speculate a lot more average life expectancy can be achieved through assuring availability of pure air and pure water to all.
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