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Removing aged cells boosts longevity in mice: study

Paris - Zapping worn-out cells in the organs of "middle-aged" mice caused the rodents to live longer, healthier lives, says a study that raises intriguing prospects for anti-ageing treatments.

Mice minus these aged or "senescent" cells went on to enjoy better kidney function and stronger hearts, a later onset of cancer and fewer cataracts than untreated peers, according to a research paper in the journal Nature.

They also lived longer.

Don't function

"The mice that were treated to remove their senescent cells had a lifespan extension... from 25 to 35%," said author Darren Baker of The Mayo Clinic College of Medicine in Minnesota.

"We found at 18 months...after six months of treatment, the treated animals were more exploratory, more active, they had also improvements in kidney function, in heart function..." he said.

The benefits extended to both genders and different strains of mouse.

"In all cases we found that there is a significant health and lifespan extension," Baker explained.

The team genetically-engineered mice in which senescent calls can be easily eliminated by using drugs to trigger a cellular "suicide gene".

Senescent cells are cells which have stopped dividing and no longer function. Some are shed naturally, but others accumulate in organs over time.

They have been speculated to have a role in ageing.

"We knew that senescent cells were accumulating with age in natural tissues and the thought was: let's just start removing these things starting at mid-age in mice and see what the consequences were," Baker said.

The results suggested "this approach may be useful to treat aspects of age-related functional decline, age-related diseases that involve senescent cells, or side effects of therapies that create senescent cells," the study authors wrote.

Cognitive function

A future step in research would be to test the method on already aged mice, to see if removing senescent cells can reverse age-related decline.

Since we cannot engineer humans with the so-called "suicide gene", the method cannot be directly tested in our own species, Baker explained.

"But there are a variety of groups that we know of that are specifically looking for compounds that can selectively eliminate these senescent cells with age that accumulate in you and I," he said.

Ageing is associated with a progressive decline in cognitive function as well as physical deterioration and finding a "cure" has been a long-held dream of science.

In May 2014, researchers reported that injections of young mouse blood boosted learning and memory in older rodents.

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