A 2-month-old mouse deficient in the Klotho protein, center, shows signs of aging, compared with a normal mouse, left. A 3-year-old mouse with an overabundance of the protein, right, has lived beyond the normal life span. (By Aline Mckenzie — University Of Texas Southwestern Medical Center At Dallas)
Scientists have identified a hormone that significantly extends the life span of mice, a discovery that could mark a crucial step toward developing drugs that boost longevity in people.
The hormone is the first substance identified that is produced naturally in mammals, including humans, and can extend life span — a long-sought goal in the intense effort to help people live longer.
Much more work is needed to study the substance, and investigate whether the hormone or a similar compound would be effective and safe in people, experts cautioned. But the discovery opens highly promising avenues for research and provides tantalizing new clues toward deciphering the basic biology of aging.
“This is a significant discovery. It’s an exciting paper,” said Anna McCormick of the National Institute on Aging, which helped fund the new research, published online yesterday by the journal Science. “It’s definitely the way you would go about designing molecules that would promote healthy aging and longevity in people.”
Makoto Kuro-o of the University of Texas’s Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, who led the research, said, “This could provide a key to understanding the molecular mechanisms of aging and opens up new areas to the potential therapy for multiple age-related diseases in humans.”
The discovery was triggered by a study Kuro-o and his colleagues published in 1997. That study identified a gene in mice that, when damaged, caused the animals to experience all the hallmarks of aging in humans — hardening of the arteries, thinning bones, withered skin, weak lungs — and to die prematurely. They dubbed the gene Klotho, for the Greek goddess who spins the thread of life.
Suspecting the gene may play a role in regulating life span, Kuro-o and his colleagues genetically engineered mice with overactive Klotho genes. In the latest experiments, they found that these animals lived an average of 20 to 30 percent longer than normal — 2.4 to 2.6 years vs. a normal life span of about two years — without any signs of ill effects, according to the new report.
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