Moderation - Posts in this topic regarding the use of 3-Bromopyruvate to fight cancer have been moved to this thread.
As I understand it, our mitochondria are basically a type of bacteria that evolution has morphed into a symbiont that lives inside our tissue cells. Each cell has on average 1000 mitochondria. Each mitochondria has its own DNA, its own ribosomes, and to some degree can be viewed as a self sufficient entity that lives within our cells.
Has anyone looked at the possibility of transplanting a young person's mitochondria into an aging adult's cells? If they do this experiment in vitro, do the cells always reject the foreign mitochondria? Does anyone understand the reasons for that? Are mitochondria specific to each type of cell, so that for example mitochondria in your heart tissues would be incompatible with those in your brain? If yes, that makes the problem many orders of magnitude tougher.
I guess the Plan B in this case would be to use a person's stem cells to manufacture young mitochondria, and then to try to implant those?
Even if this works in vitro, there would be a practical implementation issue of how do you generate enough of them, and how do you then get them into the cells?
Nevertheless, if the free radical theory of aging has now over time become the mitochondrial theory of aging, it is certainly interesting to observe that the mitochondria are really stand alone entities that exist on their own inside of the cell. In theory one should be able to engineer a younger version of your mitochondria and then give those back to you, and presumably those younger mitochondria would not degrade so rapidly, in effect bringing your cellular environment back to a level of energy metabolism, antioxidant production, and free radical resistance seen when you were 10 to 30 years old.
The reason I find this idea so exciting is that the mitochondria is in theory an extremely primitive organism whose DNA could be easily reverse engineered, and which could - once the host acceptance issue is understood - be manufactured in a large scale. It seems like an order of magnitude simpler to understand how to create perfect mitochondria than it would be to understand every nuance of a mammals cellular biology.
Edited by PerC, 25 January 2015 - 02:04 AM.