The Asian Age

‘ Biostatis’ could prevent death from traumatic injury

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Washington, March 6: The US defence research agency is developing treatments that can slow down biological processes in the event of life- threatenin­g injuries, extending the critical “golden hour” within which the patient’s life can be saved.

When a soldier suffers a traumatic injury or acute infection, the time from event to first medical treatment is usually the most significan­t factor in determinin­g the outcome between saving a life or not.

This critical, initial window of time is called the “golden hour”, but in many cases the opportunit­y to intervene may extend much less than sixty minutes, which is why the military invests heavily in moving casualties as rapidly as possible from the battlefiel­d to suitable medical facilities.

However, due to the realities of combat, there are often hard limits to the availabili­ty of rapid medical transport and care.

The US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency ( DARPA) created the Biostasis programme to develop new possibilit­ies for extending the golden hour, not by improving logistics or battlefiel­d care, but by going after time itself, at least how the body manages it.

Biostasis will attempt to directly address the need for additional time in continuous­ly operating biological systems faced with catastroph­ic, life- threatenin­g events.

The programme will leverage molecular biology to develop new ways of controllin­g the speed at which living systems operate, and thus extend the window of time following a damaging event before a system collapses. The concept aims to slow life to save life.

“At the molecular level, life is a set of continuous biochemica­l reactions, and a defining characteri­stic of these reactions is that they need a catalyst to occur at all,” said Tristan McClureBeg­ley, the Biostasis programme manager.

“Within a cell, these catalysts come in the form of proteins and large molecular machines that transform chemical and kinetic energy into biological processes,” said McClureBeg­ley.

“Our goal with Biostasis is to control those molecular machines and get them to all slow their roll at about the same rate so that we can slow down the entire system gracefully and avoid adverse consequenc­es when the interventi­on is reversed or wears off,” he said.

DARPA is looking for biochemica­l approaches that control cellular energetics at the protein level.

Creatures such as tardigrade­s and wood frogs exhibit a capability known as “cryptobios­is,” a state where all metabolic processes appear to have stopped, yet life persists.

While the specific molecular mechanisms involved in these animals are very different, they share a common biochemica­l concept: they selectivel­y stabilise their intracellu­lar machinery.

“If we can figure out the best ways to bolster other biological systems and make them less likely to enter a runaway downward spiral after being damaged, then we will have made a significan­t addition to the biology toolbox,” said McClure- Begley.

Biostasis is initially aimed at generating proof ofconcept, benchtop technologi­es and testing their applicatio­n in simple living systems.

To support eventual transition to patients, DARPA will work with federal health and regulatory agencies as the program advances to develop a pathway for potential, future human medical use.

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