In a report in the January 3 issue of Nature Communications, researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine report on work with mice that are bred especially to age quickly. The mice have a version of progeria, a disease in humans that causes children to age well before their time.
The research team looked at differences in stem cells or progenitor cells, which healthy bodies naturally keep in reserve as a source for new cells to replace worn-out cells. Not surprisingly, they found that the progeria mice had fewer progenitor cells than their healthy counterparts. What’s more, the few progenitor cells in the progeria mice failed to function normally. For example, they didn’t produce replacement cells as needed.
If that’s the problem, can it be “fixed”? The researchers, led by senior investigators Johnny Huard and Laura Niedernhofer, injected the rapidly-aging progeria mice with progenitor cells from the muscles of healthy mice. The result was pretty amazing.
"We wanted to see if we could rescue these rapidly aging animals, so we injected stem/progenitor cells from young, healthy mice into the abdomens of 17-day-old progeria mice," Dr. Huard said in a press release issued by the University of Pittsburgh. "Typically the progeria mice die at around 21 to 28 days of age, but the treated animals lived far longer—some even lived beyond 66 days. They also were in better general health."
How did this work? Did the injected cells start producing replacement cells? Possibly, but the main effect of the injected cells seems to have been to change the host cells in the body of the progeria mice. In other words, the injected healthy progenitor cells changed the progeria mouse’s own cells into more healthy, more normal cells.
"This leads us to think that healthy cells secrete factors to create an environment that help correct the dysfunction present in the native stem cell population and aged tissue," Dr. Niedernhofer said. "In a culture dish experiment, we put young stem cells close to, but not touching, progeria stem cells, and the unhealthy cells functionally improved." Fascinating!
What about mice that are aging normally? Would the injection of progenitor cells from younger mice, for example, also “rescue” non-progeria but aging mice?
Whether anything like this could be done safely in human beings is a big question that will require a lot more research. It may turn out that injecting progenitor cells into a human patient with premature aging might help stall the aging but might also create other problems, such as cancer. In time, it may be possible to get the benefits while managing the risks.
The Pitt research, although dealing with mice with progeria, opens profound questions about humanity, aging, enhancement, and the possibility of extending the human lifespan.
The biggest question of all is whether something like this would slow the aging process in normal or healthy human beings. In other words, is this yet another possible pathway to human enhancement? Could this be used to “treat aging as a disease”?
Is aging a disease? Dr. Niedernhofer’s comment is revealing: "Our experiments showed that mice that have progeria, a disorder of premature aging, were healthier and lived longer after an injection of stem cells from young, healthy animals," Dr. Niedernhofer said. "That tells us that stem cell dysfunction is a cause of the changes we see with aging." A dysfunction? A disease? A difference?
On the question of religion and the morality of extending the human lifespan, probably the best book on the market is Religion and the Implications of Radical Life Extension, edited by Calvin Mercer and Derek Maher. I have an essay in the book reflecting on the question from the standpoint of Christianity.
My take? Extending the human lifespan is not immoral or obviously wrong, but Christians hope for a transformation, not an extension. More of the same is too little.
The report appeared in the January 3 issue of Nature Communications. It is entitled Muscle-derived stem/progenitor cell dysfunction limits healthspan and lifespan in a murine progeria model and is available free to the public.
4 comments:
It's a natural phenomena in the stem cells. Damage and repair slowly degrades as the body slowly transgresses.
This article does makes sense and it's very well-explained. However, I think aging is a natural process and the things that we do to prevent it are only temporary.
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