SCs don't have much methylation. They are methylated de novo during differentiation to achieve one of 200 different cell types -- or subset thereof depending on the pluripotency of the particular SC. And Yamanaka factors don't reverse epigenetic drift per se. They create substantially unmethylated stem cells out of somatic cells, and those stem cells, once differentiated into new stem cells, have de novo and thus pristine epigenetic coding. This is not a known innate function of somatic cells, however, at least in humans. It's true that retro viruses may be used to insert certain SC proteins into somatic cells, converting them into stem cells, but that is a very artificial situation.
As for sexual aging, there are many animals that die after sex, or shortly thereafter. They live fast and die fast. This is programmed, but humans don't have such programming. That human aging can be reversed with stem cells clearly points to the decline of functional SCs as the source.
The 4 yamanka factors do not unmethylate cells. An umethylated or even partially unmethylated cell will immediately die.
Unmethylating is akin to erasing executable programs.
In fact, stem cells have a very specific epigenetic coding - different from the ones of somatic cells.
The 4 yamanaka factors change the epigenetic coding of a cell from a somatic cell coding to a stem cell coding. This is a VERY precise changing of the epigenetic coding.
D. Sinclair proved that, by using only 3 of the 4 yamanaka factors, one can eliminate the epigenetic drift of a somatic cell, to the pristine epigenetic coding of said somatic cell.
This is only possible if, in every cell, the information of the epigentic codings of stem cells/somatic cells is stored in a way that substantially prevents degradation, and there is a mechanism that can precisely change the epigenetic coding of said cell to one stored - a mechanism activated by the yamanaka factors.
BTW, when I said that aging - the slow decay of the body - begins is almost all species of animals after sexual maturity is achieved, and that is the point at which the epigenetic drift correcting mechanism begins to gradually shut down, I was NOT referring to animals that die after procreation - such as the salmon*, where death is hormonally induced -, nor to other exceptions, such as negligible senescent species.
I am referring to the vast majority of animals - which includes humans.
*Speaking of which, I read a paper detailing how, after the hormonal mechanism killing the salmons was disabled, the salmons experienced the decay of the body corresponding to standard aging.
You said that aging is caused by stem cell depletion. But you did not say why said stem cells are depleting with age.
I said why - epigenetic drift in the stem cells.
Yes, during differentiation, a stem cell will change its epigenetic coding to another type of cell. But, for this, you need the stem cell to differentiate. And the more epigenetic drift in the stem cell, the harder it is to differentiate.
Edited by Edit_XYZ, 13 July 2022 - 02:16 PM.