Get the latest Science News and Discoveries

A gene from 100-year-olds could help kids who age too fast


Scientists have discovered that a “longevity gene” found in people who live beyond 100 can reverse heart aging in models of Progeria, a devastating disease that causes children to age rapidly. By introducing this supercentenarian gene into Progeria-affected cells and mice, researchers restored heart function, reduced tissue damage, and slowed aging symptoms. The discovery opens the door to new therapies inspired by the natural biology of long-lived humans—possibly reshaping how we treat both rare diseases and normal aging.

None

Get the Android app

Or read this on ScienceDaily

Read more on:

Photo of Kids

Kids

Photo of gene

gene

Photo of olds

olds

Related news:

News photo

Too much screen time may be hurting kids’ hearts

News photo

Knocking out a gene doesn’t always rob the target cells of their mRNA and protein. Sometimes neighboring cells can provide these basic outputs to, in effect, compensate for the disabled gene. A recent mouse study pinpoints how, at least in fat tissue.

News photo

Kids have high trust of scientists, despite TV depictions - EurekAlert!