Over at Reason's site, he said that BioViva performed gene therapy for telomerase activation. Presumably they used an AAV vector to add htert. There's some info in the comments, stating the following:
Nicolai said:
You forgot to mention the other treatment they applied, the myostatin inhibitor AAV gene therapy
And Steve h said:
To clarify the two therapies in question are htert and a proprietary myostatin inhibitor that has in animal data and anecdotal human data shown to reduce atherosclerosis. The hope is the combination has synergy to rejuvenate stem cells and combat Atherosclerosis as well as muscle wastage.
I'm not sure what they mean by a myostatin "inhibitor". Wouldn't they need to reduce the expression of myostatin? Is there an endogenous protein inhibitor of myostatin that could be inserted? Anyone know what they actually did? "Anecdotal human data shown to reduce atherosclerosis?" I wonder where that happened?