Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have developed a new procedure to increase the length of human telomeres.
This increases the number of times cells are able to divide,
essentially making the cells many years younger. This not only has
useful applications for laboratory work, but may point the way to
treating various age-related disorders – or even muscular dystrophy.
http://www.gizmag.com/telomere-extension-aging/35816/pictures
Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have
developed a new procedure to increase the length of human telomeres.
This increases the number of times cells are able to divide, essentially
making the cells many years younger. This not only has useful
applications for laboratory work, but may point the way to treating
various age-related disorders – or even muscular dystrophy.
Telomeres are the caps at the ends of our chromosomes that protect
the DNA code of the genome.
Linked to aging and disease, they are 8,000
to 10,000 nucleotides long in young people, but this decreases as we age
(a nucleotide is an organic molecule that is a subunit of nucleic acids
DNA and RNA). The researchers have found a way to lengthen a telomere
by 1,000 nucleotides, which Dr. Helen Brau, professor of microbiology
and immunology at Stanford, says is the equivalent of "many years of
human life."
Telomeres shorten each time a cell divides and at a certain point,
when they reach a critical length, the cell can no longer divide and
will die. Their limited lifespan means that growing cells in
laboratories can be tricky, given there can only be so many cell
doublings before they give up the ghost. Telomere function in humans has
been linked to many diseases and they have been studied for decades,
often in the hope of better understanding or delaying the aging process.
Cells treated with Stanford’s procedure multiply in a similar way to
much younger cells, compared with untreated cells of the same age.
According to the researchers, skin cells with telomeres lengthened by
the procedure were able to divide around 28 more times than untreated
cells, while muscle cells divided about three more times. With this new
procedure, which uses modified RNA, many more cells can be easily
generated for study and drug development or disease modeling.
The “modified messenger” RNA contains the coding sequence for the
active component of telomerase, called TERT. Telomerase is the enzyme
that rebuilds telomeres and stem cells, including those that give rise
eggs and sperm, express the enzyme at a much higher rate than other
kinds of cells. Essentially, the RNA is a kind of genetic carrier pigeon
in that it carries instructions from the DNA’s genes to the cell’s
protein-making areas. Interestingly, in previous work Dr Blau found that
the muscle stem cells of boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy had far
shorter telomeres than those not suffering from the disease.
Although application of this RNA initially causes telomeres to
lengthen, within 48 hours they once again begin to shorten as cells
divide. This is a good thing, however, as cells that divide endlessly
could pose a increased cancer risk if used in humans.
Just three applications of the modified RNA over a short space of days can increase telomere length in muscle and skin cells.
"Our technique is nonimmunogenic," said postdoctoral scholar John
Ramunas. "Existing transient methods of extending telomeres act slowly,
whereas our method acts over just a few days to reverse telomere
shortening that occurs over more than a decade of normal aging. This
suggests that a treatment using our method could be brief and
infrequent."
Researchers are now testing the technique on other types cells and
may try to treat accelerated aging disorders or target types of muscle
cells in cases of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, or even heart disease.
The team's paper was recently published in FASEB Journal.
Source: Stanford University