Sinclair has suggested human trials could commence within next year. “This new discovery offers the potential to reverse aging with a single pill, with applications ranging from improving eyesight to effectively treating age-related diseases.” Other biologists skeptical.

  • zlatiah@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Oh boy it’s my time to shine!

    I’m working in aging right now. Heard of Dr. David Sinclair since he was the corresponding author on a paper I was curious about… So this is what his lab is doing.

    Two important disclaimers:

    • Success in cellular research rarely translates to something viable in the clinic. A lot of chemicals don’t behave the same way in cells as in actual animals or humans. Heck, a good number of phase 2 drugs even fail, and these haven’t even made it into phase 1… so I wouldn’t be too optimistic about them.
    • The journal Aging is not the most prestigious journal especially for someone working at Harvard Medical School (HMS) to be honest. I’d be more excited if this was published in Nature Aging or Nature Communications or something. If this ever gets published in New England Journal of Medicine (a very prestigious journal only for clinical studies) then we have some news.

    The link between cell senescence and aging is something actively being studied tho.

    And, if anyone is curious about this topic: I’m also very actively following Dr. Vadim Gladyshev who is also from HMS and is working in aging, I believe he is doing some wet lab-biology on a similar area as well. Feels like his research is sometimes a bit ahead of his time but I think his work has great potential.

  • over_clox@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    So… Reverses aging of skin cells?

    Sounds great! You can be 80 years old, look like you’re 20, and still have Alzheimer’s…

    Sure what the hell, sign me up! /s

    • Bop@lemmy.film
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      1 year ago

      What a weird article. Is there more than that first paragraph?

      Also, I’ve been following Dr. Sinclair for a little while. He’s become a more well known name for his work at Harvard trying to reverse aging. He’s written a book and made a podcast about the subject and what he says is super interesting but I’d still love to see the actual studies he’s worked on. Veritassiun made a video that pretty succinctly sums up his major points if you’re want to check it out, he has recommendations beyond this “miracle drug”.

    • Neato@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It will require you to be a billionaire, or a world leader. Most likely someone important or powerful will buy the patent and then keep it back for their cronies. They need their slaves workers to be ignorant and desperate. Living a lot longer means they gain more knowledge and have more incentive to ensure the remainder of their lives are lived well. Billionaires want people downtrodden enough that they will do anything to ensure food for their children.

      It’s possible a billionaire will give this to workers since it seems to improve productivity into older ages. Buuuut I’d bet dollars to doughnuts that receiving this drug is contingent on signing a contract to work for their mega corporation until retirement. Said retirement age will be pushed out as more usable lifespan is gained from this drug until you retire. Oh, no you don’t get retirement benefits and most likely people receiving this drug can’t participate in 401ks or similar retirement schemes since they will have an “unfair advantage” of having so much longer to accure interest that other workers simply can’t compete! (but we’re not going to limit user’s stock trading because that’s what the rich use, shhhh)

  • eek2121@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Scientists at Harvard University claim to have come excitingly close to finding the proverbial Fountain of Youth. According to a recent publication in the scientific journal Aging, the team has identified six chemical concoctions that have the ability to reverse the aging process in both human and mice skin cells.

    Dr. David Sinclair, a molecular biologist at Harvard Medical School and co-author of the study, has hailed this as a “breakthrough” and sees it as a step towards “affordable whole-body rejuvenation.”

    Dr. Sinclair has even suggested that human trials could commence within the next year. This prediction has caught the attention of prominent figures, such as tech mogul Elon Musk. He responded to the news with curiosity asking, “Ok, so what exactly is it?”

    How to create a Fountain of Youth pill

    The researchers utilized high-throughput cell-based assays to distinguish young cells from their older, senescent counterparts. These senescent cells are cells that have stopped multiplying, a characteristic hallmark of aging.

    Through high-throughput screening, the team was able to rapidly test thousands to millions of samples for biological activity at the model organism, cellular, pathway, or molecular level.

    The specific markers used for aging included transcription-based aging clocks and real-time nucleocytoplasmic protein compartmentalisation (NCC) assay. NCC is a vital function in cells, including stem cells, bone cells, and muscle cells.

    Six chemical cocktails for anti-aging

    This comprehensive approach culminated in the identification of six chemical mixtures that, according to the press release, “restored NCC and genome-wide transcript profiles to youthful states and reversed transcriptomic age [biological age] in less than a week.”

    Upon testing these cocktails on mice and human cells, the results suggested a de-aging effect for all six combinations.

    “The effect of this four-day treatment is comparable to the total change seen after a year of a regenerative treatment described in a landmark study from 2019, which also focused on restoring epigenetic information,” said the researchers. Researchers evaluated age changes using rodent and human transcriptomic clocks, which predict biological age using gene expression data.

    “This new discovery offers the potential to reverse aging with a single pill, with applications ranging from improving eyesight to effectively treating age-related diseases,” said Dr. Sinclair.

    Some experts are skeptical

    However, other biologists have met this enthusiastic claim with skepticism. Matt Kaeberlein, a biogerontologist, offered cautious praise. He says that the innovative screening method could one day lead to significant discoveries. However, he also noted that the study is preliminary.

    Kaeberlein suggested that the team should have validated at least one of the concoctions in an animal model. He believes they also should have shown improvements in age-related health metrics or lifespan before making these claims about effects on biological aging.

    Dr. Charles Brenner, a metabolism researcher, raised concerns about three compounds in the study. The first is CHIR99021, which blocks glycogen formation activated during sleep to store energy. Next is tranylcypromine, an antidepressant. Finally,valproic acid, used to treat bipolar disorder but can potentially harm the liver.

    The study did not mention these potential risks. Brenner warned, “These are generally not safe alone or in a combination.”

    Moreover, Brenner criticized the study for not using single-cell sequencing to evaluate cell identity. He pointed out that researchers initially reported these cocktails in 2013, suggesting that the compounds are not new discoveries. “Getting these readouts on cells is not a groundbreaking study on reversal of aging,” said Brenner.

    Amidst this range of responses, it’s clear that we need to conduct further research and careful examination before we can proclaim the arrival of a true Fountain of Youth pill.

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I read this guy’s book, It was pretty straightforward and didn’t seem to be doing a lot of dressing up the data (as far as I understood what he was talking about).

    The book, why we age and why we don’t have to, explains exactly those six markers that this pill is supposed to roll back. Which is perfectly plausible to me; age reversal, that is.

  • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    I become more convinced that Sinclair is a snake oil salesman every time I hear something come out of his lab. But I hope I’m wrong.

    • WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Don’t be. The lab next door to them recently created a philosopher’s stone. So you know it’s all legit.

  • GustavoM@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Eh. Even if it works, I like my gray hair as is, thank you very much. Unless if it means not entirely a “reverse-aging pill”, but a PREVENTION of common aging problems such as slow reflexes, poor eyesight, etc… then sign me up.