The Philippine Star

Cells’ garbage disposal may hold key to longer life

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PARIS ( AFP) – Autophagy, the little-understood method by which human cells dispose of harmful waste and unwelcome intruders, may one day be central to therapies for longer, healthier living, experts said Friday.

Japanese cell biologist Yoshinori Ohsumi was awarded the 2016 Nobel Medicine prize Monday for discoverin­g genes involved in autophagy, a non-stop houseclean­ing process that keeps cells healthy, and is thought to spur aging and disease when disrupted.

Scientists are striving to “find a way to increase it beyond what it normally does,” said University of Edinburgh cell biologist Simon Wilkinson referring to future treatment possibilit­ies for cancer and neurodegen­erative diseases such as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s.

“Can we find drugs that will ramp it up further than it would ordinarily be?” he told AFP by phone. “Can we ameliorate these horrible disorders?”

Trial drugs in lab experiment­s with human cells and mice have shown that autophagy can indeed be boosted.

In “mouse models, for example, where autophagy has been increased geneticall­y, the mice do age better,” Wilkinson said.

Concretely, this meant a less rapid accumulati­on of damaged proteins in cells, and a metabolism with a slower rate of age-related decline.

Autophagy — from the Greek words for “self” and “to eat”— is a process by which cells in animals and plants get rid of damaged proteins, as well as specialize­d structures called organelles which have become defunct.

Allowed to accumulate, these useless scraps would damage the cell and upset its normal functionin­g, leading to health problems.

Autophagy was already known to scientists in the 1960s, but Ohsumi, who studied the process in yeast in the 1990s, was the first to uncover the genes responsibl­e.

Yeast is a favorite of biologists because it shares much of its cell structure and functionin­g with humans and other animals.

No drug in sight

Autophagy happens when fatty membranes called autophagos­omes envelop the unwanted waste and sequester it from the rest of the cell.

The autophagos­omes then join up with another specialize­d cell compartmen­t full of digestive enzymes, called a vacuole, to obliterate the waste.

“Autophagy declines when we age. That’s why we accumulate these dysfunctio­nal proteins that cause diseases,” University of Warwick autophagy expert Ioannis Nezis told AFP.

“Now we are trying to understand how this process declines during aging, and how we can find innovation­s to activate this process and keep our cells healthy for longer, so we can live a better and longer life.”

The experts stressed that an autophagy-based drug was still far off.

“Tests are being conducted on mice,” said Guido Kroemer, an autophagy researcher at the Inserm medical research institute. “Tests on humans might begin in a few years.”

Two main avenues were being investigat­ed, he explained.

The first was an autophagy stimulator to slow aging and the developmen­t of diseases such as diabetes, clogged arteries, certain cancers or neurodegen­erative conditions.

Another option was to use autophagy inhibitors to lower cancer cells’ resistance to chemothera­py.

Much more is understood about autophagy since Ohsumi’s breakthrou­gh — with about a dozen papers published on the subject until 1990, and some 30,000 since then, according to Nezis.

But a lot remains unknown – chiefly how and when to use a drug molecule to boost autophagy without causing unwanted sideeffect­s.

Wilkinson cautioned autophagy was unlikely to yield the elixir of life.

 ?? AP ?? Japanese scientist Yoshinori Ohsumi won this year’s Nobel Prize in medicine for his ‘brilliant experiment­s’ on autophagy, the machinery with which cells recycle their content. Disrupted autophagy has been linked to various diseases, including...
AP Japanese scientist Yoshinori Ohsumi won this year’s Nobel Prize in medicine for his ‘brilliant experiment­s’ on autophagy, the machinery with which cells recycle their content. Disrupted autophagy has been linked to various diseases, including...

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