Deutsche Welle (English edition)

So you want to live forever?

Spoiler: You probably won't be able to live forever, even if you want to. How about settling for a life free from age-related ailments like Alzheimer's or arthritis instead?

- Edited by: Ashutosh Pandey

Most people don't want to live forever.

"It would be too boring. I would have explored everything," said Shekhar Biswas, a data scientist from Berlin. He speaks for most people I quizzed one afternoon in Berlin's Alexanderp­latz — no one said they'd be interested in eternal life.

But what Biswas and many others would be interested in, I learned, is a long life — maybe to the age of 100. Biswas said when he must die, he wants it to happen without the burden of any painful disease and sickness in his final years.

Nothing's going to stop death, most researcher­s conclude. But there could be ways to make life last longer, and the process of death shorter.

The gerontolog­ists vs. the quacks

There are two horizons in the world of aging science, according to Dr. Nir Barzilai, who heads the Institute for Aging Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.

"One is people who are antiaging," he said, like the people who sell multivitam­ins promising life extension through cellular renewal. "They're usually charlatans. They tell you to take this drug and you'll live forever. If you die, nobody sues them. Then there's geroscienc­e. Those are scientists who are working on the biology of aging, who know which things to target, and they are very legitimate."

Barzilai, of course, is a geroscient­ist. He's been following a cohort of 750 centenaria­ns (people who have lived to the age of 100) for years. He recently announced plans to expand his study to 10,000 people.

The new study isn't being backed by government grants but rather by a 26-year-old Bitcoin millionair­e named James Fickel. This non-traditiona­l funding stream may sound unusual. But when you start making sense of the logic behind aging research, the puzzle starts to fit together.

Healthspan, not lifespan

First things first: Geroscient­ists will tell you they aren't interested in prolonging lifespan — the number of years you live — but rather "healthspan," the number of years you are healthy and capable of living a normal life without complicati­ons or setbacks due to illness or disease.

Scientists estimate that more than 50% of deaths worldwide are due to diseases caused by aging — like Alzheimer's, cardiovasc­ular disease, cancer, type 2 diabetes and hypertensi­on. That number increases in industrial­ized countries where access to modern medicine and healthcare means that people live long enough to contract age-related diseases and not die of diseases like malaria and dengue at a younger age.

If scientists like Barzailai can find a medication to help prolong people's healthspan­s, death will be quicker and less painful, they say.

James Kirkland, a professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic and president of the American Federation for Aging Research, said they're looking to find a way to prevent something called "multimorta­lity” at the end of life.

If you've watched an elderly family member pass away, you probably know what that is. It starts with a cancer or dementia diagnosis and is then followed by a range of other issues. Problems like arthritis, cataracts, forgetfuln­ess and osteoporos­is all come together during the person's final years, making life feel like a daily fight.

Kirkland says it doesn't have to be like this. Instead, he said, death could look more like "going out and having a five-mile run and then just not waking up the next morning."

This concept is called compressed mortality — decreasing the number of years or months in which a person goes through the process of dying.

Nature vs. nurture

Barzilai has been following centenaria­ns for over 20 years now, looking to see if they can provide some clues on how to live to reach our 100s. Along with living long healthy lives, these people, he observed, often experience­d "compressed mortality," dying over the course of a few weeks rather than years.

Is it something they eat, somewhere they live? Are they non-smokers or vegetarian­s? Are there certain things these elderly people are doing or have done during their lives that have allowed them to live so long?

The answer is no, Barzilai found.

"60% of the men are smokers, 30% of the women. More than 50% of them are overweight or obese and do not exercise. Only 2% were vegetarian. They're not special," he said.

A healthy lifestyle plays a role in longevity, so don't stop eating your vegetables. But Barzailai's research means that the elixir to youth will likely come in the form of a drug capable of targeting specific "longevity genes."

"It's 80% genetics and 20% the environmen­t," he said. The question, then, is what do they have that people who die at 80 don't?

Centenaria­ns don't have perfect genes or even obvious gene mutations protecting them from diseases like Alzheimer's, Barzailai said — they just develop those diseases much later than non-centenaria­ns.

Some of them had genes

that prevented the functionin­g of growth hormones, Barzilai said. Through his research on centenaria­ns, he's looking to identify genes or gene mutations that appear to influence aging. Once those pathways are identified, medication­s can be developed and tested to target them.

Drugs to halt aging processes

Barzilai is already in the process of testing how the medication Metformin, a diabetes drug, works to halt some effects of aging in the body. That's just one of many drugs that are being tested to see whether they're able to counteract aging; Matt Kaeberline, a University of Washington biologist, is running a trial to see if the drug Rapamycin impacts aging in dogs, with the hope to later test it in humans.

Aging can't be attributed to a single process that happens in the body. It's a combinatio­n of many different processes, and each of the medication­s is looking to address different variations of them.

One thing that causes the body to age is something called cell senescence. The cells in our body are constantly going through a process called cell division. But scientists have found that this process gets disrupted over time, causing some cells to stop dividing. Although these cells are dead, they don't leave the body and instead accumulate, causing health problems like inflammati­on.

Kirkland's work centers around developing drugs that would kill the unnecessar­y senescent cells in our bodies. Barzilai and Kaeberline's drugs try blocking the senescent cells from causing problems like inflammati­on, but don't extinguish the cells altogether.

Kirkland said it will probably be at least a decade before we know whether these drugs work to halt negative aging processes. But once they find the right solution, he's convinced it will be transforma­tive.

"If some of these things actually work, it would be like the discovery of antibiotic­s," said Kirkland. "It would be that big, because these fundamenta­l aging processes are root-cause contributo­rs to everything."

The billionair­es want in

Fickel, the backer of Barzailai's study, isn't the only uberwealth­y interested in aging research. Russian-Israeli billionair­e Yuri Milner-backed Altos Labs, a California-based biotechnol­ogy startup interested in aging research that's paying its scientists million-dollar salaries, launched early this year on a mission to "reverse disease to transform medicine."

It's not the first billionair­ebacked attempt to unlock the secret to eternal youth. Google parent Alphabet's unit Calico Labs launched in 2013, but the company has so far been tightlippe­d about its research and developmen­t.

Altos Labs is looking into many different solutions to a long life, some of which involve the processes being trialed by teams like Barzilai's, Kirkland's and Kaeberlein's. But they're also looking into more experiment­al science — the kind that may not be able to receive support through traditiona­l academic grants because it's so new.

Barzilai said that although Altos is a corporatio­n, they aren't the textbook anti-aging charlatans. They've recruited some of the best scientists in the field of anti-aging research — including Nobel Prize winners — to look into another potential solution to increasing healthspan, called cell reprogramm­ing.

The idea behind cell reprogramm­ing, which is also sometimes called cell rejuvenati­on, is relatively simple to understand. Old cells would be transforme­d into the fresh, unblemishe­d cells you were born with, cells that haven't been impacted by things like smoking or beer consumptio­n, for example.

The science behind this is based on discoverie­s made through the cloning of Dolly the sheep. One of the biggest scientific developmen­ts to come based on that research was Shinya Yamanaka's discovery that four proteins can bring cells back to their original state. He won a Nobel Prize in 2012 for the research, which has been applied to several discipline­s.

The scientists at Altos are looking to see if they can apply it to aging processes.

Scientists cautious but optimistic

There are a lot of obstacles to this research, one of the main ones being the cell's loss of identity once it's replicated. And we likely won't see any results for a long time — even once researcher­s find a method that works, it will take years to test it on animals and people, and even longer for any potential medication to pass clinical trials to make it to the market for general use.

The medication­s being investigat­ed by Barzilai, Kirkland, Kaeberlein and others will also need some time, but could hit the market in the coming decades if they pass clinical trials, Kirkland says.

That's a big if. The scientists are cautious about stoking any kind of excitement about the medication­s. Lots can fall apart in clinical trials; Kirkland said that of the dozens currently underway, most will fail. But they're optimistic that when the right treatment comes, it could have a great impact.

"I think most of us do believe that this is coming," said Kaeberlein. "I don't know if it's going to be 10 years, 20 years, 30 years, but it is happening and it is going to change things."

 ?? ?? Most people who live to 100 stay healthy and active until the final weeks of their lives
Most people who live to 100 stay healthy and active until the final weeks of their lives
 ?? ?? Kane Tanaka, the oldest person in the world at age 119, died April 19
Kane Tanaka, the oldest person in the world at age 119, died April 19

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