Today’s society is obsessed with being young. However, the best option for remaining young appears to be calorie restriction. Problem is few want to do this, and calorie
restriction is not 100% proven to work in humans. Really the best people can do
right now is just cover aging up is by moisturizing, using sunblock,
working out, getting botox or dying our hair.
But, two classic experiments have kept many hopes alive to turning back
the clock someday.
Back in 1989 two scientist, Faulkner and Carlson, at the
University of Michigan performed a muscle graft experiment. Muscle from a young rat was grafted and put
into an old rat. Then vice versa, old rat muscle placed into a young rat. To the scientist surprise the old muscle
grafted into the young rat regenerated much better than the young muscle
grafted into an old mouse. This changed
the idea of aging to focus on the environment of the tissue.
Well, sixteen years later in 2005, Thomas Rando at Stanford University
performed a similar experiment where they changed the systemic environment of
an old mouse. Rando’s lab did this by a cool technique called parabiosis where
two mice's cardiovascular systems are surgically connected together. Rando specific technique used was called Heterchronic Parabiosis (i.e. Different Age
Parabiosis) to assess how a young systemic environment affected an older
animal. He connected the circulatory system of an old mouse to a young mouse. Similar to Faulkner and Carlson’s muscle graft
experiment, the older mice tissue showed a youthful regeneration.
Both of these studies indicate that the blood or the
systemic environment that the tissue baths in plays a key role in the aging
process. While, the age of the tissue seems to have less of an impact. The future of these
experiments could lead to organ regeneration or celebrities like Suzan
Summers getting blood transfusion from babies to roll back the odometer. The world of aging might have cracked the code and it appears the to be something in young blood. Vampires might have had it right this whole time.
Carlson, B. M., Dedkov, E. I., Borisov, A. B., & Faulkner, J. A.
(2001). Skeletal Muscle Regeneration in Very Old Rats. The Journals of
Gerontology Series a: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, 56(5),
B224–B233. doi:10.1093/gerona/56.5.B224
Conboy, I.
M., Conboy, M. J., Wagers, A. J., Girma, E. R., Weissman, I. L., & Rando,
T. A. (2005). Rejuvenation of aged progenitor cells by exposure to a young systemic
environment. Nature, 433(7027), 760–764. doi:10.1038/nature03260