Biomarkers aging
Lung Cancer ~ Lung Cancer ~ Breast Cancer ~ Heart attack ~ All Health Topics
Home / Health News / 2008 / November 2008 / November 20, 2008
Biomarkers of aging identified

Health News

Sack lunches may not provide adequate nutrients to preschooler
Packing lunch for your child might not be a good idea, for a new study has found that sack lunches may not regularly provide adequate nutrients for the growth and development of young children. ANI

Health-monitoring system helps maintain older adults well-being
Many older adults want to remain active and independent for as long as possible. Now, researchers from University of Missouri suggest that installing health monitoring system can help keep check on the health of the elderly and ensure their privacy. ANI

New drug shows potential to treat angina, other cardiac problems
A compound, designed to prevent chest pains in heart patients, could act as a drug to treat angina and possibly other cardiac pathologies, according to a study on animals. ANI

Biomarkers of aging identified

In a first of its kind study, scientists at the Buck Institute for Age Research have uncovered biomarkers of aging, which can predict both chronological and physiological age.

Washington, Nov 20 : In a first of its kind study, scientists at the Buck Institute for Age Research have uncovered biomarkers of aging, which can predict both chronological and physiological age.

Biomarkers are biochemical features that can be used to measure the progress of disease or the effects of treatment.

The scientists conducted the study by using nematode worms, microarrays which measure changes in gene expression, and complex computer algorithms.

And they believe that the step could help them identify similar biomarkers in humans, which would provide a means of scientifically validating anti-aging therapies.Chronological and physiological age are rarely in sync. Determining chronological age in both worms and humans is easy - count forward from birth. Determining physiological age remains subjective - based on how someone looks or functions.

Some 70 year old humans function at the level of those in their 50's, others become frail elderly sooner than would be expected. C. elegans, the nematode worm, is a similar creature.

Having an average lifespan of three weeks, some nematodes remain active much longer than then their similarly-aged brethren, while others show signs of premature aging (lack of symmetrical appearance, uncoordinated motion, and the need to be prodded into movement).

The researchers could predict the age of the worms by doing whole-genome expression profiles of 104 individual wild-type worms covering the entire nematode lifespan and correlating that profiling with age-related behaviour and survival.

The study revealed a suite of genes that are actively involved in the aging process.

"This is the first evidence that physiological age can be predicted non-subjectively. This is a first step; our results were not perfect, but we were able to predict the ages of the animals 70% of the time, which is far better than anything that has been done before," said Simon Melov, PhD, Buck faculty member and lead author of the study.

The study has implications for age research in humans.

Examining biomarkers over time would provide a scientific baseline for clinical trials of anti-aging medicines, which is currently impossible to determine given the lengthy lifetime of human beings.

The technology would also provide a means of determining whether an individual is aging faster or slower than would normally be expected.

The research is appearing in the latest online edition of Aging Cell.

ANI

January 8, 2009

January 7, 2009

January 6, 2009

January 5, 2009

January 4, 2009

January 3, 2009