Liposomal delivery of substances is another possibility.
Good idea.
What animal would be the best to test the liposomal delivery? I think it should be one without hairs?
I have worked in a lab which works on IPS and altough I can not go into detail, I just can say that inducing stem cells is not so easy, even in vitro. Otherwise it is also worth mentioning, that IPS can form teratomas, I would not feel safe even by throwing c-myc out. So trying to do something like that in vivo in a human would be very difficult and risky.
Yes, it is risky! You are right.
But look at nature.
The nature has tried million of years to create an human immortal being. Result was only cancer till now. But nature just created two higher immortal animals. The one is a
jellyfish species. the other is the
sea cucumber (not sure, but very long-living anyway!). It needed many million years but it was successful in the end.
The mechanisms of both are different but both involving epigenetics.
- The jellyfish by cyclic epigenetic reprogramming
- The sea cucumber by two mechanisms: continously high saponin levels (toxic to human but not to the sea cucumber),
continously reprogramming and loosing abundant tissue - throwing away their intestinal tract!
Transdifferentiation is the key word here!
We just need to copy nature - why has nobody done yet? I want to do!
Why am I swallowing tons of ginseng, jiaogulan and other plant saponins? Because I copy the sea cucumber. But saponins are only one important key to epigenetics! It does only the half job. There must be another important key. I think the epigenetic program ends in the nowhere! It has never been completed cause men died early so there was no selection for longvity.
What is aging else than epigenetics?
Let's discuss reprogramming. Just theoretical in the beginning - but this is the only way that will work!
But aging between 0 and 120 years is controlled by epigenetics. I would say 90 % epigenetics and 10 % other reasons!!
I'd have to disagree. Important, yes. But still overstated imo.
What else would be the aging mechanism?
- Oxidation? No!
- Intracellular junk? No!
- Glycation? Yes, in some tissues: eyes, skin... , but not in all, it is a part itial reason but not the main reason!
- Telomere shortening? No.. we die before this happens in most cells. But it will play a big role if we would be older.
So if you know, please explain me what aging is!
I can explain you aging in a simple picture:
Aging is
Start Program -- 1 -- 2 -- 3 -- 4 -- 5 -- 6 -- 7 -- 8 -- End Program
Long live is:
Start Program ---- 1 ---- 2 ---- 3 ---- 4 ---- 5 ---- 6 ---- 7 ---- 8 ---- End ProgramBut it never reverses except in the special quail or the sea cucumber!
So aging is nothing else than a one way program. Imperfect programming. The programmer started to write a program, but he never completed it!
A cycle would be perfect.
Do you understand me?
P.S. Lots of corrections. My english is not the best. Sorry!
Edited by Hedrock, 14 April 2010 - 10:24 PM.