The Miracle

Scientists reverse aging-associated skin wrinkles and hair loss in a mouse model

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Agene mutation causes wrinkled skin and hair loss; turning off that mutation restores the mouse to normal appearance. Source: University of Alabama at Birmingham Summary: Researcher­s have reversed wrinkled skin and hair loss, hallmarks of aging, in a mouse model. When a mutation leading to mitochondr­ial dysfunctio­n is induced, the mouse develops wrinkled skin and extensive, visible hair loss in a matter of weeks. When the mitochondr­ial function is restored by turning off the gene responsibl­e for mitochondr­ial dysfunctio­n, the mouse returns to smooth skin and thick fur, indistingu­ishable from a healthy mouse of the same age. Wrinkled skin and hair loss are hallmarks of aging. What if they could be reversed? Keshav Singh, Ph.D., and colleagues have done just that, in a mouse model developed at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. When a mutation leading to mitochondr­ial dysfunctio­n is induced, the mouse develops wrinkled skin and extensive, visible hair loss in a matter of weeks. When the mitochondr­ial function is restored by turning off the gene responsibl­e for mitochondr­ial dysfunctio­n, the mouse returns to smooth skin and thick fur, indistingu­ishable from a healthy mouse of the same age. “To our knowledge, this observatio­n is unpreceden­ted,” said Singh, a professor of genetics in the UAB School of Medicine. Importantl­y, the mutation that does this is in a nuclear gene affecting mitochondr­ial function, the tiny organelles known as the powerhouse­s of the cells. Numerous mitochondr­ia in cells produce 90 percent of the chemical energy cells need to survive. In humans, a decline in mitochondr­ial function is seen during aging, and mitochondr­ial dysfunctio­n can drive age-related diseases. A depletion of the DNA in mitochondr­ia is also implicated in human mitochondr­ial diseases, cardiovasc­ular disease, diabetes, age-associated neurologic­al disorders and cancer. “This mouse model,” Singh said, “should provide an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y for the developmen­t of preventive and therapeuti­c drug developmen­t strategies to augment the mitochondr­ial functions for the treatment of aging-associated skin and hair pathology and other human diseases in which mitochondr­ial dysfunctio­n plays a significan­t role.” The mutation in the mouse model is induced when the antibiotic doxycyclin­e is added to the food or drinking water. This causes depletion of mitochondr­ial DNA because the enzyme to replicate the DNA becomes inactive. In four weeks, the mice showed gray hair, reduced hair density, hair loss, slowed movements and lethargy, changes that are reminiscen­t of natural aging. Wrinkled skin was seen four to eight weeks after induction of the mutation, and females had more severe skin wrinkles than males. Dramatical­ly, this hair loss and wrinkled skin could be reversed by turning off the mutation. The photos below show the hair loss and wrinkled skin after two months of doxycyclin­e induction, and the same mouse a month later after doxycyclin­e was stopped, allowing restoratio­n of the depleted mitochondr­ial DNA. Little change was seen in other organs when the mutation was induced, suggesting an important role for mitochondr­ia in skin compared to other tissues. The wrinkled skin showed changes similar to those seen in both intrinsic and extrinsic aging -- intrinsic aging is the natural process of aging, and extrinsic aging is the effect of external factors that influence aging, such as skin wrinkles that develop from excess sun or long-term smoking. Among the details, the skin of inducedmut­ation mice showed increased numbers of skin cells, abnormal thickening of the outer layer, dysfunctio­nal hair follicles and increased inflammati­on that appeared to contribute to skin pathology. These are similar to extrinsic aging of the skin in humans. The mice with depleted mitochondr­ial DNA also showed changed expression of four aging-associated markers in cells, similar to intrinsic aging. The skin also showed disruption in the balance between matrix metallopro­teinase enzymes and their tissue-specific inhibitor -- a balance of these two is necessary to maintain the collagen fibers in the skin that prevent wrinkling. The mitochondr­ia of induced-mutation mice had reduced mitochondr­ial DNA content, altered mitochondr­ial gene expression, and instabilit­y of the large complexes in mitochondr­ia that are involved in oxidative phosphoryl­ation. Reversal of the mutation restored mitochondr­ial function, as well as the skin and hair pathology. This showed that mitochondr­ia are reversible regulators of skin aging and loss of hair, hair an observatio­n that Singh calls “surprising.” “It suggests that epigenetic mechanisms underlying mitochondr­ia-to-nucleus crosstalk must play an important role in the restoratio­n of normal skin and hair phenotype,” Singh said, who has a secondary UAB appointmen­t as professor of pathology. “Further experiment­s are required to determine whether phenotypic changes in other organs can also be reversed to wildtype level by restoratio­n of mitrochond­rial DNA.” Note: Miracle Media nor printed Mouses Pictures you can see at below website Source: www.sciencedai­ly.com July 20, 2018 and see the pictures of 3 mouse under ...... The mouse in the center photo shows aging-associated skin wrinkles and hair loss after two months of mitochondr­ial DNA depletion. That same mouse, right, shows reversal of wrinkles and hair loss one month later, after mitochondr­ial DNA replicatio­n was resumed. The mouse on the left is a normal control, for comparison.

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