Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The key to eternal youth

Scientists successful­ly turn back the clock in old human cells by increasing the length of telomeres

- By Ellie Zolfaghari­fard

Eternal youth could be one step closer following the successful transforma­tion of old human cells into young ones.

The process increases the length of the ' telomeres', which are the protective caps on the end of chromosome­s that impact ageing and disease.

Researcher­s in the US say the technique could extend human life and provide new hope for battling diseases that arise from old age. Telomeres -- often described as being like the plastic caps on the end of shoelaces -- help keep DNA healthy.

These protective end caps become shorter with each DNA replicatio­n, and eventually are no longer able to protect DNA from sustaining damage and mutations, causing people to age.

In young people, telomeres are about 8,000-10,000 organic molecules, or nucleotide­s, long.

'Now we have found a way to lengthen human telomeres by as much as 1,000 nucleotide­s, turning back the internal clock in these cells by the equivalent of many years of human life,' said Helen Blau of Stanford University.

To make the discovery, researcher­s used modified messenger RNA to extend the telomeres.

RNA carries instructio­ns from genes in the DNA to the cell's protein-making factories.

The RNA used in this experiment contained the coding sequence for TERT - the active component of a naturally occurring enzyme called telomerase.

When the cells are treated, they behave as if they are younger and multiply quickly rather than dying.

'One day it may be possible to target muscle stem cells in a patient with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, for example, to extend their telomeres,' said Dr Blau.

'There are also implicatio­ns for treating conditions of aging, such as diabetes and heart disease.

'This has really opened the doors to consider all types of potential uses of this therapy.'

The researcher­s also hope that the method will be able to allow scientists to generate large numbers of cells that could someday lead to an effective anti-aging drug.

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 ??  ?? Carol Greider, who shared the 2009 Nobel Prize for Medicine with Elizabeth Blackburn and Jack Szostak for discoverin­g how chromosome­s are protected by telomeres (AFP)
Carol Greider, who shared the 2009 Nobel Prize for Medicine with Elizabeth Blackburn and Jack Szostak for discoverin­g how chromosome­s are protected by telomeres (AFP)

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