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Posted by mlaughter88 on April 11, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

Partial reversal of aging achieved in mice

Control of telomerase gene appears to control process

By Richard Saltus

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Sunday, November 28, 2010

DePinho_605 

File photo by Kris Snibbe/Harvard Staff Photographer

Researchers led by Ronald A. DePinho (above), a Harvard Medical School professor of genetics, say their work shows for the first time a dramatic reversal of many aspects of age-related degeneration in mice, a milestone in aging science achieved by engineering mice with a controllable telomerase gene. The projection of chromosomes seen here shows telomeres (highlighted in red) on their ends.

Harvard scientists at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute say they have for the first time partially reversed age-related degeneration in mice, resulting in new growth of the brain and testes, improved fertility, and the return of a lost cognitive function.

In a report posted online by the journal Nature in advance of print publication, researchers led by Ronald A. DePinho, a Harvard Medical School (HMS) professor of genetics, said they achieved the milestone in aging science by engineering mice with a controllable telomerase gene. The telomerase enzyme maintains the protective caps called telomeres that shield the ends of chromosomes.

As humans age, low levels of telomerase are associated with progressive erosion of telomeres, which may then contribute to tissue degeneration and functional decline in the elderly. By creating mice with a telomerase switch, the researchers were able to generate prematurely aged mice. The switch allowed the scientists to find out whether reactivating telomerase in the animals would restore telomeres and mitigate the signs and symptoms of aging. The work showed a dramatic reversal of many aspects of aging, including reversal of brain disease and infertility.

While human applications remain in the future, the strategy might one day be used to treat conditions such as rare genetic premature aging syndromes in which shortened telomeres play an important role, said DePinho, senior author of the report and the director of Dana-Farber’s Belfer Institute for Applied Cancer Science. “Whether this would impact on normal aging is a more difficult question,” he added. “But it is notable that telomere loss is associated with age-associated disorders and thus restoration of telomeres could alleviate such decline.” The first author is Mariela Jaskelioff, a research fellow in medicine in DePinho’s laboratory.

Importantly, the animals showed no signs of developing cancer. This remains a concern because cancer cells turn on telomerase to make themselves virtually immortal. DePinho said the risk can be minimized by switching on telomerase only for a matter of days or weeks — which may be brief enough to avoid fueling hidden cancers or cause new ones to develop. Still, he observed, it is an important issue for further study.

In addition, DePinho said these results may provide new avenues for regenerative medicine, because they suggest that quiescent adult stem cells in severely aged tissues remain viable and can be reactivated to repair tissue damage.

“If you can remove the underlying damage and stresses that drive the aging process and cause stem cells to go into growth arrest, you may be able to recruit them back into a regenerative response to rejuvenate tissues and maintain health in the aged,” he said. Those stresses include the shortening of telomeres over time that causes cells and tissues to fail.

Loss of telomeres sends a cascade of signals that cause cells to stop dividing or self-destruct, stem cells to go into retirement, organs to atrophy, and brain cells to die. Generally, the shortening of telomeres in normal tissues shows a steady decline, except in the case of cancer, where they are maintained.

The experiments used mice that had been engineered to develop severe DNAand tissue damage as a result of abnormal, premature aging. These animals had short, dysfunctional telomeres and suffered a variety of age-related afflictions that progressed in successive generations of mice. Among the conditions were testes reduced in size and depleted of sperm, atrophied spleens, damage to the intestines, and shrinkage of the brain along with an inability to grow new brain cells.

“We wanted to know: If you could flip the telomerase switch on and restore telomeres in animals with entrenched age-related disease, what would happen?” explained DePinho. “Would it slow down aging, stabilize it, or even reverse it?”

Rather than supply the rodents with supplemental telomerase, the scientists devised a way to switch on the animals’ own dormant telomerase gene, known as TERT. They engineered the endogenous TERT gene to encode a fusion protein of TERT and the estrogen receptor. This fusion protein would only become activated with a special form of estrogen. With this setup, scientists could give the mice an estrogen-like drug at any time to stimulate the TERT-estrogen receptor fusion protein and make it active to maintain telomeres.

Against this backdrop, the researchers administered the estrogen drug to some of the mice via a time-release pellet inserted under the skin. Other animals, the controls, were given a pellet containing no active drug.

After four weeks, the scientists observed remarkable signs of rejuvenation in the treated mice. Overall, the mice exhibited increased levels of telomerase and lengthened telomeres, biological changes indicative of cells returning to a growth state with reversal of tissue degeneration, and increase in size of the spleen, testes, and brain. “It was akin to a Ponce de León effect,” noted DePinho, referring to the Spanish explorer who sought the mythical Fountain of Youth.

“When we flipped the telomerase switch on and looked a month later, the brains had largely returned to normal,” said DePinho. More newborn nerve cells were observed, and the fatty myelin sheaths around nerve cells — which had become thinned in the aged animals — increased in diameter. In addition, the increase in telomerase revitalized slumbering brain stem cells so they could produce new neurons.

To show that all this new activity actually caused functional improvements, the scientists tested the mice’s ability to avoid a certain area where they detected unpleasant odors that they associated with danger, such as scents of predators or rotten food. They had lost that survival skill as their olfactory nerve cells atrophied, but after the telomerase boost, those nerves regenerated and the mice regained their crucial sense of smell.

“One of the most amazing changes was in the animals’ testes, which were essentially barren as aging caused the death and elimination of sperm cells,” recounted DePinho. “When we restored telomerase, the testes produced new sperm cells, and the animals’ fecundity was improved — their mates gave birth to larger litters.”

The telomerase boost also lengthened the rodents’ life spans compared to their untreated counterparts — but they did not live longer than normal mice, said the researchers.

The authors concluded, “This unprecedented reversal of age-related decline in the central nervous system and other organs vital to adult mammalian health justifies exploration of telomere rejuvenation strategies for age-associated diseases.”

Other authors include members of the DePinho research group andEleftheria Maratos-Flier, an HMS professor of medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Healthand the Belfer Foundation.

Posted by mlaughter88 on April 10, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

Telomerase Stimulation Extends Lifespan in Mice

May 16, 2012

 

 

Stimulation of telomerase safely extends lifespan in mice, a new study shows.

In a landmark study demonstrating “proof of principle” of the feasibility and safety of “slowing or turning back the clock,” Spanish researchers gave aged mice a single treatment to stimulate genetic expression of telomerase that extended health and lifespan by up to 24 percent.

These new results serve as yet more validation of research performed by Isagenix Founder John Anderson in partnership with molecular biologist Bill Andrews, Ph.D., on inducing the expression of telomerase in humans with natural compounds for healthier aging and greater longevity. This research is what led to the creation of Isagenix product, Product B.

Although previous research has long suggested telomerase expression would maximize the potential for cells to replicate, Maria Blasco, Ph.D., and fellow researchers from the Spanish National Cancer Centre (CNIO) showed unequivocally that increasing this enzyme in aging mice improves health and extends lifespan safely without any increase in rates of cancer.

Dr. Andrews responded with excitement to this new research: “I have been struggling with trying to debate the rumors that telomerase may cause cancer for almost 20 years. In the last 5 years there have been a large number of publications suggesting that telomerase, in fact, does not cause cancer. But, nothing shows it better than this publication by Dr. Maria Blasco that just came out.”

More than just a testament to the safety, the authors of the just-released study report the thrilling implications of “delaying physiological aging and extending longevity in normal mice” through telomerase induction and demonstrating its feasibility as an aging intervention.

Since the discovery of telomerase and its potential to extend lifespan were unveiled, a number of studies have been performed investigating the potential therapeutic benefits. Manipulating gene expression to combat or potentially reverse aging has driven researchers into the field of telomeres.

Telomeres are the guards of the genetic material housed by the cell. These protein caps shelter the chromosome from damage during cell division (at least for the first 80 cycles). With time the telomere shortens and eventually cell death (what we recognize as aging) occurs. Telomerase lengthens telomeres, preventing erosion of the chromosome and damage to DNA—as the authors phrase it, this enzyme acts as a “longevity gene.”

In the current study, a component of telomerase, mTERT, increased lifespan by 24 percent in mice treated at one years of age and by 13 percent in mice treated at two years of age. Researchers used an adeno-associated virus to introduce the mTERT gene therapy to the aged mice. Accessible to a large range of tissues, the authors reported significant improvements in many independent biomarkers of aging.

Bone mineral density increased significantly in both groups of mice. Physical appearance was bolstered by an improved retention of subcutaneous fat–a defining physical feature of youth. Even coordination and balance improved in mice that received the mTERT treatment. Moreover, insulin sensitivity and the ability to maintain blood sugar improved.

In each instance, telomerase appeared to be an agent of regeneration, contributing to more than an appearance of youthful aging. More cell cycles, as shown by the current study, can actually translate to a longer lifetime. The authors report that this telomerase gene therapy may “affect maximum longevity” and more importantly, do so without increasing risk for cancer. The potential, therefore, is currently limitless.

Telomere length is known to be influenced by a variety of factors. Engaging in stress reduction, meditation, physical activity, and diet can extend telomere length and potentially lifespan. Researchers are nearing the potential of tapping our own genes to promote healthier, longer lives. Telomerase could be the key for regeneration, rejuvenation, and “turning back the clock.”

With enthusiasm, Dr. Andrews cites this paper as yet another example, “that lengthening telomeres extends the lifespans of mice and has remarkable beneficial effects on their health and fitness. It’s a very exciting day for telomerase/telomere research. Telomeres are the key to longer, healthier lives. Everything that John Anderson and I are working on is fulfilling the promises that Maria’s new publication forecasts. I’m excited!”

In previous research at Harvard Medical School, geneticist Ronald Dephino, Ph.D. and colleagues found that mice lacking telomerase aged much more rapidly, and died earlier, as an abundance of critically short telomeres developed. But when the enzyme was reawakened in the mice, age-related symptoms disappeared and rejuvenation was seen in several organs including their brains.

 

Reference: de jesus BB, Vera E, Schneeberger K, Tejera AM, Ayuso E, Bosch F, and Blasco MA. Telomerase gene therapy in adult and old mice delays aging and increases longevity without increasing cancer. EMBO Mol Med 2012;4:1-14.DOI: 10.1002/emmm.201200245

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