Engineering Therapeutic Tissue

If you can build new living tissue to be implanted in patients, then why not also give it the capacity to perform additional useful tasks? This is a technology platform with some potential: “combining gene therapy with tissue engineering could avoid the need for frequent injections of recombinant drugs. Patients who rely on recombinant, protein-based drugs must often endure frequent injections, often several times a week, or intravenous therapy. Researchers [have demonstrated] the possibility that blood vessels, made from genetically engineered cells, could secrete the drug on demand directly into the bloodstream. … Such drugs are currently made in bioreactors by engineered cells, and are very expensive to make in large amounts. … The paradigm shift here is, ‘why don’t we instruct your own cells to be the factory?’ … [Researchers] provide proof-of-concept, reversing anemia in mice with engineered vessels secreting erythropoietin (EPO). … The researchers created the drug-secreting vessels by isolating endothelial colony-forming cells from human blood and inserting a gene instructing the cells to produce EPO. They then added mesenchymal stem cells, suspended the cells in a gel, and injected this mixture into the mice, just under the skin. The cells spontaneously formed networks of blood vessels, lined with the engineered endothelial cells. Within a week, the vessels hooked up with the animals’ own vessels, releasing EPO into the bloodstream. Tests showed that the drug circulated throughout the body and reversed anemia in the mice.”

Link: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/engineered-drug-secreting-blood-vessels-reverse-anemia-in-mice-2011-11-15

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/feed/

Some Aging Isn’t Aging

We might look on aging as damage that happens as a stochastic, inevitable consequence of the operation of a biochemical system. So the buildup of chemical gunk between your cells is a part of aging, while those times you managed to break bones in your enthusiasm for life are not aging, despite the fact that what’s left in the wake of those unfortunate accidents is definitely damage.

There are always special cases and grey areas worth thinking about, however. Such as teeth, for example, as I was reminded earlier today. Teeth have a pretty hard time of it, actually, when you stop to think about it. Even in this modern age our teeth maintenance technologies remain woefully inadequate in the face of bacterial species that break down enamel, and so our teeth are one of the most failure-prone and damage-prone parts of the body – and they get to the point of painful dysfunction far earlier than the rest of our organs if left to their own devices.

But that isn’t aging – it’s parasitism, no more aging than the consequences of contracting malaria. It’s still something we need to fix, of course, and I post on this and related topics because it is of general interest to anyone who follows research into rejuvenation and regeneration. If most or all of us suffer a particular form of bacterial malfeasance that manages to be as damaging as that which chews upon our teeth, than dealing with that problem has to be included in any general toolkit for enhanced human longevity.

As an aside, I should note that the hard components of teeth do age:

enamel thickness related to age showed a steady decrease, beginning at approximately age 50.

There are apparently chemical composition changes, increased brittleness, and so forth – none of which seems to have much to do with the bacteria that cause cavities.

Another completely unrelated grey area is something I touch on frequently: the structural changes that take place in the <a href=adaptive immune system due to exposure to infectious agents. The adaptive component of the immune system performs throughout life just as it evolved to do – which means it devotes space and cells to remembering the pathogens it has encountered so that it can effectively destroy them in the future. But by continuing to function in this way, it becomes less and less effective over time: in later life too much of its capacity is taken up with memory cells and too little with killer cells. So quite aside from what we might think of as biological aging, the adaptive immune system succeeds itself into an increasingly broken state just by doing its job. Whether or not we call this process aging, it still has to be fixed, auch as by using targeted cell destruction therapies to eliminate memory cells and free up space.

There are other examples. But you get the point: not all of the degenerations that we suffer with advancing age are in fact aging per se, or at least they will not fit into the usefully narrow definitions of aging that I find helpful. They will still need to be addressed, prevented, and their consequences repaired.

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/feed/

Attempting a Nuanced View

From h+ Magazine: “As serious life extension appears on an ever nearer horizon simultaneous with a period of social and economic rebellion and an increasing sense of global chaos, this may be a good time to entertain these anxieties while thinking beyond the two extant competing simplistic arguments. The current conflicting views seem to be these: A: Hyperlongevity will be for rich people only and we can’t afford to add to the population vs. B: Technologies get distributed to more and more people at an increasing rate of speed through the auspices of the free market. Demand increases. Production increases. The price gets lower. Demand increases. Production increases. The price gets lower… ad infinitum. In fact, the wealthy who are the early adopters of a new technology get to spend a lot of money on crappy versions of new technologies that are not ready for prime time. At the risk of being obvious, it seems like there’s a lot of room in the middle for more nuanced, less certain views. … Very few people would say that we shouldn’t cure cancer or heart disease because only the wealthy will be able to afford it – and those who did would be seen by most as anti-human and/or insufferably whiny. Seen in this light, it becomes obvious that this whole ‘only the rich will get hyperlongevity’ mentality is pathetic in the extreme – a concession of defeat before the outset. If you think optimal health and longevity should be distributed, you won’t say, ‘Well, it won’t be distributed so I’m against it.’ You will try to make sure it gets distributed. Whether you believe in medical care for all through government or pushing these solutions towards a very large mass market or creating an open source culture that takes production and distribution into its own decentralized hands, you’ll work or fight for one or several (or all) of these solutions.”

Link: http://hplusmagazine.com/2011/11/15/live-long-and-prosper-umm-well-get-back-to-you-on-that-prosper-bit/

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/feed/

Fight Aging! Newsletter, November 21st 2011

FIGHT AGING! NEWSLETTER
November 21st 2011

The Fight Aging! Newsletter is a weekly email containing news, opinions, and happenings for people interested in aging science and engineered longevity: making use of diet, lifestyle choices, technology, and proven medical advances to live healthy, longer lives. This newsletter is published under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license. In short, this means that you are encouraged to republish and rewrite it in any way you see fit, the only requirements being that you provide attribution and a link to Fight Aging!

______________________________

CONTENT

- An Unusually Clear Example of the Cost of the FDA
- The Methuselah Generation Kickstarter Project
- Longevity Mutations that Only Work With Civilization
- Some Aging Isn’t Aging
- Considering the Lab Mice
- Discussion
- Latest Headlines from Fight Aging!

AN UNUSUALLY CLEAR EXAMPLE OF THE COST OF THE FDA

The FDA holds back progress, and makes medical development either expensive or blocks it completely where the costs imposed make it impossible to profitably develop new medical technologies:

http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/an-unusually-clear-example-of-the-cost-of-the-fda.php

“The FDA, like all bureaucratic organizations, long ago came to serve its own continuance above and beyond all other goals. Its own continuance as a political organization depends on releasing as few new medical advances as possible. Approval of medicine that never causes problems gains the bureaucrats no reward, while approval of medicine that does at some point cause problems results in punishment – there is no such thing as an absolutely safe medicine, of course, and the popular media will pillory the FDA for events that are well within the expected range of risk and reward in medicine. A low rate of approval of new technologies causes little harm to the bureaucrats, in comparison, and thus is acceptable for their needs, which is to say a job and a career. Thus the self-interest of those in charge of the FDA at all levels leads to an organization structured to actively sabotage its original goals; this is more or less the place in which all government organizations wind up.

“In any case, here is an example of the cost of the FDA, with some numbers, and a line of research abandoned as being too expensive under the present regulations: Biotechnology firm Geron said last night that it would discontinue its stem-cell research program and halt a pioneering clinical study in people with spinal-cord injury. The decision brings to a halt the world’s largest and longest-running program to develop medical treatments from embryonic stem cells, versatile cells able to form many other types of human tissue. … We’re not doing this because we were souring on the field, or as a result of any problems – we have not had any safety issues at all … The attempt to study stem cells in humans had proved stupendously expensive and slow-moving for Geron. The company estimated that it spent $45 million just to win FDA approval for the initial safety trial of its treatment, known as GRNOPC1. As of October, however, only four patients had been treated, and the company would have had to spend tens of millions more in order to finish the study.”

THE METHUSELAH GENERATION KICKSTARTER PROJECT

Filmmakers are raising funds to complete their project, a film on longevity science and its future:

http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/the-methuselah-generation-kickstarter-project.php

“A while back I mentioned the Methuselah Generation, a documentary film on progress on longevity science and the future of the human life span. The more of this sort of media project underway the better, I think – the state of the science really just sells itself once you kick people into waking up and thinking about the topic of aging and rejuvenation biotechnology. The trick is to make this something that people are talking about and thinking about. In any case, the Methuselah Generation filmmakers recently drew my attention to their Kickstarter fundraising page: … Kickstarter is an all or nothing proposition: either they raise the minimum funding by the set date, $30,000 by December 26th in this case, or none of the funds are released. It’s a good system for ensuring a certain minimum level of achievement for a donor’s funds – if too little is raised to ensure a good shot at the project then your money is released to be used elsewhere.”

LONGEVITY MUTATIONS THAT ONLY WORK WITH CIVILIZATION

Why are there so many simple single gene mutations that significantly extend life and improve health in mice? Why were these not selected by evolution already?

http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/some-longevity-mutations-require-civilization-and-technology.php

“Deletion of the p66(Shc) gene results in lean and healthy mice, retards aging and protects from aging-associated diseases, raising the question of why p66(Shc) has been selected, and what is its physiological role. We have investigated survival and reproduction of p66(Shc) -/- mice in a population living in a large outdoor enclosure for a year, subjected to food competition and exposed to winter temperatures. Under these conditions deletion of p66(Shc) was strongly counterselected. … So in other words, lack of p66(Shc) only extends life and causes the mutants to prosper as individuals if they have the benefits of civilization and technology: secure food supplies, secure heating, protection from the elements, and so forth. If shoved out into the uncaring world, they fare poorly – and would soon enough vanish as a genetic line, out-competed by animals with shorter life spans but a better adapted metabolism. We might expect to see similar results for the range of other longevity genes discovered in small mammals: if there was an evolutionary benefit to their selection for animals in the wild, then we should expect that these longevity mutations would already have been selected.”

SOME AGING ISN’T AGING

If we think of aging as an accumulation of damage that occurs as a result of the operation of our biology, there are some grey areas:

http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/some-aging-isnt-aging.php

“We might look on aging as damage that happens as a stochastic, inevitable consequence of the operation of a biochemical system. So the buildup of chemical gunk between your cells is a part of aging, while those times you managed to break bones in your enthusiasm for life are not aging, despite the fact that what’s left in the wake of those unfortunate accidents is definitely damage. There are always special cases and grey areas worth thinking about, however. Such as teeth, for example, as I was reminded earlier today. Teeth have a pretty hard time of it, actually, when you stop to think about it. Even in this modern age our teeth maintenance technologies remain woefully inadequate in the face of bacterial species that break down enamel, and so our teeth are one of the most failure-prone and damage-prone parts of the body – and they get to the point of painful dysfunction far earlier than the rest of our organs if left to their own devices.

“But that isn’t aging – it’s parasitism, no more aging than the consequences of contracting malaria. It’s still something we need to fix, of course, and I post on this and related topics because it is of general interest to anyone who follows research into rejuvenation and regeneration. If most or all of us suffer a particular form of bacterial malfeasance that manages to be as damaging as that which chews upon our teeth, than dealing with that problem has to be included in any general toolkit for enhanced human longevity.”

CONSIDERING THE LAB MICE

An interesting trio of long articles on laboratory mice were recently published, and links can be found in the following Fight Aging! post:

http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/considering-the-mice-and-other-sundry-rodents.php

“So very much of the research we watch is conducted in mice, rats, and – increasingly – in naked mole rats and other more esoteric members of the rodent order of mammals. Some of this work is fairly directly applicable to we humans, and some of it is not. For example, the types and proportions of advanced glycation end-product (AGE) that accumulate to damage our cells in later life are very different between rodents and humans, and so early promising work in rats aimed at developing AGE-breaker drugs to wash out these unwanted compounds translated poorly to humans. So how much attention should we give to promising results in mice? That can only be answered for any specific case by knowing more about the use of mice in the laboratory; it is very helpful for the layperson to have a better grasp as to the benefits, limitations, and expectations held by scientists when it comes to research in rodent species that is expected to be applicable to humans. On this note, let me draw your attention to a trio of long articles from Slate that examine the humble laboratory mouse.”

DISCUSSION

The highlights and headlines from the past week follow below. Remember – if you like this newsletter, the chances are that your friends will find it useful too. Forward it on, or post a copy to your favorite online communities. Encourage the people you know to pitch in and make a difference to the future of health and longevity!

______________________________

LATEST HEADLINES FROM FIGHT AGING!

PROTEIN ACETYLATION AND AGING
Friday, November 18, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/protein-acetylation-and-aging.php
An open access commentary: “Aging is now viewed as a plastic phenotype that can be altered by nutritional, pharmacological and genetic manipulations. However, most pro-longevity mutations are discovered by systematic gene deletion or RNA interference screens, which mainly reveal abolished or diminished gene functions. In our recent publications, we used global acetylation proteome screens to study aging in yeast, and showed that enhancing the function of certain genes through specific acetylation can promote longevity. … It is well known that acetylation of histone proteins in cultured human fibroblasts decreases during aging, which is believed to be directly related to decreased metabolic rate and reproductive capacity associated with aging. However, histone deacetylation is not likely to be a universal driving force of aging because histone acetylation and deacetylation mimetics similarly shortened life span, which could simply reflect nonspecific fitness decreases in both instances. Extension of lifespan promoted by certain genetic and/or pharmacological perturbations will more likely lead to identification of bona fide regulatory factors of aging. … Aging is conventionally thought to be characterized by accumulation of molecular, cellular, and organ damage, leading to increased vulnerability to disease and death. Our data, on the contrary, support the idea that the gradual loss of a crucial component promoting ‘healthy young status’ might underlie an intrinsic aging process. Many of the mutations that extend life span decrease the activity of external nutrient signaling, such as the IGF (insulin-like growth factor)/insulin and the TOR (target of rapamycin) pathways, suggesting that they may induce a metabolic state similar to that resulting from periods of food shortage.”

ENGINEERING THERAPEUTIC TISSUE
Friday, November 18, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/engineering-therapeutic-tissue.php
If you can build new living tissue to be implanted in patients, then why not also give it the capacity to perform additional useful tasks? This is a technology platform with some potential: “combining gene therapy with tissue engineering could avoid the need for frequent injections of recombinant drugs. Patients who rely on recombinant, protein-based drugs must often endure frequent injections, often several times a week, or intravenous therapy. Researchers [have demonstrated] the possibility that blood vessels, made from genetically engineered cells, could secrete the drug on demand directly into the bloodstream. … Such drugs are currently made in bioreactors by engineered cells, and are very expensive to make in large amounts. … The paradigm shift here is, ‘why don’t we instruct your own cells to be the factory?’ … [Researchers] provide proof-of-concept, reversing anemia in mice with engineered vessels secreting erythropoietin (EPO). … The researchers created the drug-secreting vessels by isolating endothelial colony-forming cells from human blood and inserting a gene instructing the cells to produce EPO. They then added mesenchymal stem cells, suspended the cells in a gel, and injected this mixture into the mice, just under the skin. The cells spontaneously formed networks of blood vessels, lined with the engineered endothelial cells. Within a week, the vessels hooked up with the animals’ own vessels, releasing EPO into the bloodstream. Tests showed that the drug circulated throughout the body and reversed anemia in the mice.”

ATTEMPTING A NUANCED VIEW
Thursday, November 17, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/attempting-a-nuanced-view.php
From h+ Magazine: “As serious life extension appears on an ever nearer horizon simultaneous with a period of social and economic rebellion and an increasing sense of global chaos, this may be a good time to entertain these anxieties while thinking beyond the two extant competing simplistic arguments. The current conflicting views seem to be these: A: Hyperlongevity will be for rich people only and we can’t afford to add to the population vs. B: Technologies get distributed to more and more people at an increasing rate of speed through the auspices of the free market. Demand increases. Production increases. The price gets lower. Demand increases. Production increases. The price gets lower… ad infinitum. In fact, the wealthy who are the early adopters of a new technology get to spend a lot of money on crappy versions of new technologies that are not ready for prime time. At the risk of being obvious, it seems like there’s a lot of room in the middle for more nuanced, less certain views. … Very few people would say that we shouldn’t cure cancer or heart disease because only the wealthy will be able to afford it – and those who did would be seen by most as anti-human and/or insufferably whiny. Seen in this light, it becomes obvious that this whole ‘only the rich will get hyperlongevity’ mentality is pathetic in the extreme – a concession of defeat before the outset. If you think optimal health and longevity should be distributed, you won’t say, ‘Well, it won’t be distributed so I’m against it.’ You will try to make sure it gets distributed. Whether you believe in medical care for all through government or pushing these solutions towards a very large mass market or creating an open source culture that takes production and distribution into its own decentralized hands, you’ll work or fight for one or several (or all) of these solutions.”

THE END OF TOOTH DECAY LOOMS LARGE
Thursday, November 17, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/the-end-of-tooth-decay-looms-large.php
Teeth are one of the first parts of our body to become seriously damaged as the years go by, thanks to bacterial agents, but that will soon enough be a thing of the past. On the one hand enamel regeneration is close to realization, and on the other hand so are ways of eliminating the agents of tooth decay: “A new mouthwash developed by a microbiologist at the UCLA School of Dentistry is highly successful in targeting the harmful Streptococcus mutans bacteria that is the principal cause tooth decay and cavities. In a recent clinical study, 12 subjects who rinsed just one time with the experimental mouthwash experienced a nearly complete elimination of the S. mutans bacteria over the entire four-day testing period. … This new mouthwash is the product of nearly a decade of research conducted by Wenyuan Shi … Shi developed a new antimicrobial technology called STAMP (specifically targeted anti-microbial peptides) [which] acts as a sort of ’smart bomb,’ eliminating only the harmful bacteria and remaining effective for an extended period. … With this new antimicrobial technology, we have the prospect of actually wiping out tooth decay in our lifetime.”

INDUCING DEDIFFERENTIATION FOR HEART REGENERATION
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/inducing-dedifferentiation-for-heart-regeneration.php
As knowledge of cellular programming and signaling systems increases, the future of cell therapies will most likely move away from transplants and towards controlling existing populations of cells in the body: “In order to regenerate damaged heart muscle as caused by a heart attack [simpler] vertebrates like the salamander adopt a strategy whereby surviving healthy heart muscle cells regress into an embryonic state. This process, which is known as dedifferentiation, produces cells which contain a series of stem cell markers and re-attain their cell division activity. Thus, new cells are produced which convert, in turn, into heart muscle cells. The cardiac function is then restored through the remodelling of the muscle tissue. An optimised repair mechanism of this kind does not exist in humans. Although heart stem cells were discovered some time ago, exactly how and to what extent they play a role in cardiac repair is a matter of dispute. It has only been known for a few years that processes comparable to those found in the salamander even exist in mammals. … [Researchers have] now discovered the molecule responsible for controlling this dedifferentiation of heart muscle cells in mammals. The scientists initially noticed the high concentration of oncostatin M in tissue samples from the hearts of patients suffering from myocardial infarction. It was already known that this protein is responsible for the dedifferentiation of different cell types, among other things. … Using a mouse infarct model, the [researchers] succeeded in demonstrating that oncostatin M actually does stimulate the repair of damaged heart muscle tissue as presumed. One of the two test groups had been modified genetically in advance to ensure that the oncostatin M could not have any effect in these animals. … The difference between the two groups was astonishing. Whereas in the group in which oncostatin M could take effect almost all animals were still alive after four weeks, 40 percent of the genetically modified mice had died from the effects of the infarction.”

A TEMPORARY LIVER, AS NEEDED
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/a-temporary-liver-as-needed.php
Here is an interesting application of cell therapy, which demonstrates the point that an artificial replacement for an organ doesn’t necessarily have to replicate the form and structure of that organ: “Eight-month-old Iyaad Syed now looks the picture of health – but six months ago he was close to death. A virus had damaged his liver causing it to fail. Instead of going on a waiting list for a transplant, doctors injected donor liver cells into his abdomen. These processed toxins and produced vital proteins – acting rather like a temporary liver. The cells were coated with a chemical found in algae which prevented them from being attacked by the immune system. After two weeks his own liver had begun to recover. … The question now is whether the technique could be used to benefit other patients with acute liver failure. The team [is] urging caution – a large clinical trial is needed to test the effectiveness of the technique. … The principle of this new technique is certainly ground-breaking and we would welcome the results of further clinical trials to see if it could become a standard treatment for both adults and children.”

ANOTHER INDICATOR OF THE IMPORTANCE OF AUTOPHAGY
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/another-indicator-of-the-importance-of-autophagy.php
Autophagy is a collection of similar processes for cellular housekeeping: recycling broken components so that they can’t cause harm. More autophagy means a better running biological machine, and that in turn brings enhanced longevity. Aging, after all, is really nothing more than the accumulation of unrepaired biological damage. Here is another example of this principle in action: “Evidence for a regulatory role of the miR-34 family in senescence is growing. However, the exact role of miR-34 in aging in vivo remains unclear. Here, we report that a mir-34 loss-of-function mutation in Caenorhabditis elegans markedly delays the age-related physiological decline, extends lifespan, and increases resistance to heat and oxidative stress. We also found that RNAi against [autophagy-related genes] significantly reversed the lifespan-extending effect of the mir-34 mutants. Furthermore, miR-34a inhibits [gene expression of an autophagy-related gene] at the post-transcriptional level in vitro … Our results demonstrate that the C. elegans mir-34 [loss of function] mutation extends lifespan by enhancing autophagic flux in C. elegans, and that miR-34 represses autophagy by directly inhibiting the [expression of autophagy-related genes] in mammalian cells.”

STEM CELLS REVERSE HEART DAMAGE
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/stem-cells-reverse-heart-damage.php
More evidence for the utility of early stage stem cell therapies of the sort that have been available overseas through medical tourism for a number of years, and which would also be available in the US if not for the FDA: “16 patients with severe heart failure received a purified batch of cardiac stem cells. Within a year, their heart function markedly improved. The heart’s pumping ability can be quantified through the “Left Ventricle Ejection Fraction,” a measure of how much blood the heart pumps with each contraction. A patient with an LVEF of less than 40% is considered to suffer severe heart failure. When the study began, Bolli’s patients had an average LVEF of 30.3%. Four months after receiving stem cells, it was 38.5%. Among seven patients who were followed for a full year, it improved to an astounding 42.5%. A control group of seven patients, given nothing but standard maintenance medications, showed no improvement at all. … We were surprised by the magnitude of improvement. … [Elsewhere] 17 patients [were] given stem cells approximately six weeks after suffering a moderate to major heart attack. All had lost enough tissue to put them ‘at big risk’ of future heart failure … The results were striking. Not only did scar tissue retreat – shrinking [between] 30% and 47% – [but] the patients actually generated new heart tissue. On average, the stem cell recipients grew the equivalent of 600 million new heart cells …. By way of perspective, a major heart attack might kill off a billion cells. … the heart contains a type of stem cell that can develop into either heart muscle or blood vessel components – in essence, whatever the heart requires at a particular point in time. The problem for patients [is] that there simply aren’t enough of these repair cells waiting around. The experimental treatments involve removing stem cells through a biopsy, and making millions of copies in a laboratory.”

PARKINSON’S RESEARCH AND MITOCHONDRIAL REPAIR
Monday, November 14, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/parkinsons-research-and-mitochondrial-repair.php
The Parkinson’s research community may turn out to be an ally in efforts to develop mitochondrial repair technologies suitable for use in rejuvenation: “genetic mutations causing a hereditary form of Parkinson’s disease cause mitochondria to run amok inside the cell, leaving the cell without a brake to stop them. … Mitochondria, when damaged, produce reactive oxygen species that are highly destructive, and can fuse with healthy mitochondria and contaminate them, too … Normally, when mitochondria go bad, PINK1 tags Miro, [a protein which literally hitches a molecular motor onto the organelle], to be destroyed by Parkin and enzymes in the cell, the researchers showed. When Miro is destroyed, the motor detaches from the mitochondrion. The organelle, unable to move, can then be disposed of: The cell literally digests it. But when either PINK1 or Parkin is mutated, this containment system fails, leaving the damaged mitochondria free to move about the cell, spewing toxic compounds and fusing to otherwise healthy mitochondria and introducing damaged components. … The study’s findings are consistent with observed changes in mitochondrial distribution, transport and dynamics in other neurodegenerative diseases … Whether it’s clearing out damaged mitochondria, or preventing mitochondrial damage, the common thread is that there’s too much damage in mitochondria in a particular brain region. … [Researchers are] interested in the possibility of helping neurons flush out bad mitochondria or make enough new, healthy mitochondria to keep them viable.”

CRYONICS MAGAZINE, 4TH QUARTER 2011
Monday, November 14, 2011
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2011/11/cryonics-magazine-4th-quarter-2011.php
The latest Cryonics issue is out: “The 2011 4th quarter issue of Cryonics magazine is dedicated to the ‘father of cryonics,’ Robert Ettinger, who was cryopreserved on July 23, 2011. Alcor staff member Mike Perry contributes an historical piece on Ettinger and Mark Plus and Charles Platt write about his influence on contemporary cryonics, futurism, and the cryobiology community. Cryonics editor Aschwin de Wolf compiled Robert Ettinger’s mature thoughts on the feasibility of ‘mind uploading’ and situates his outlook in a broader philosophical context. This issue also features a detailed article by the Alcor Board of Directors and Management about member underfunding and its associated challenges for Alcor’s long-term financial health. Alcor member, and prolific science fiction writer, Gregory Benford is featured in this issue’s member profile.”

______________________________

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/feed/

The End of Tooth Decay Looms Large

Teeth are one of the first parts of our body to become seriously damaged as the years go by, thanks to bacterial agents, but that will soon enough be a thing of the past. On the one hand enamel regeneration is close to realization, and on the other hand so are ways of eliminating the agents of tooth decay: “A new mouthwash developed by a microbiologist at the UCLA School of Dentistry is highly successful in targeting the harmful Streptococcus mutans bacteria that is the principal cause tooth decay and cavities. In a recent clinical study, 12 subjects who rinsed just one time with the experimental mouthwash experienced a nearly complete elimination of the S. mutans bacteria over the entire four-day testing period. … This new mouthwash is the product of nearly a decade of research conducted by Wenyuan Shi … Shi developed a new antimicrobial technology called STAMP (specifically targeted anti-microbial peptides) [which] acts as a sort of ’smart bomb,’ eliminating only the harmful bacteria and remaining effective for an extended period. … With this new antimicrobial technology, we have the prospect of actually wiping out tooth decay in our lifetime.”

Link: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111116045657.htm

Source:
http://www.longevitymeme.org/newsletter/latest_rss_feed.cfm

Source:
http://www.longevitymedicine.tv/feed/

Regular Teeth Cleanings Could Cut Heart Attack Risk: Study

(HealthDay News) -- People who visit the dentist regularly to have their teeth cleaned may lower their risk for heart attack or stroke, new research suggests.

The finding is to be presented Sunday at the American Heart Association's annual meeting, in Orlando, Fla.

In following more than 100,000 people with no history of heart problems or stroke for an average of seven years, researchers from Taiwan found those who had their teeth scraped and cleaned by a dentist or dental hygienist at least twice a year for two years had a 24 percent lower risk for heart attack and a 13 percent lower risk for stroke compared to those who never went to the dentist or only went once in two years.

"Protection from heart disease and stroke was more pronounced in participants who got tooth scaling at least once a year," said Dr. Emily (Zu-Yin) Chen, a cardiology fellow at the Veterans General Hospital in Taipei in a news release from the American Heart Association. Read more...

Ayurtox for Body Detoxification

Source:
http://anti-aging-for-today.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss

Regular Teeth Cleanings Could Cut Heart Attack Risk: Study

(HealthDay News) -- People who visit the dentist regularly to have their teeth cleaned may lower their risk for heart attack or stroke, new research suggests.

The finding is to be presented Sunday at the American Heart Association's annual meeting, in Orlando, Fla.

In following more than 100,000 people with no history of heart problems or stroke for an average of seven years, researchers from Taiwan found those who had their teeth scraped and cleaned by a dentist or dental hygienist at least twice a year for two years had a 24 percent lower risk for heart attack and a 13 percent lower risk for stroke compared to those who never went to the dentist or only went once in two years.

"Protection from heart disease and stroke was more pronounced in participants who got tooth scaling at least once a year," said Dr. Emily (Zu-Yin) Chen, a cardiology fellow at the Veterans General Hospital in Taipei in a news release from the American Heart Association. Read more...

Ayurtox for Body Detoxification

Source:
http://anti-aging-for-today.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss

Pathology Visions Conference Draws Digital Pathology Professionals from Around the World

Congratulations to the award winners and travel award recipients. Great turnout for this meeting complete with CME and attendees from 17 countries.  

An unprecedented number of digital pathology professionals attended the 7th annual Pathology Visions Conference earlier this month. The Digital Pathology Association (DPA) gathering in San Diego featured more than 50 presenters and 42 educational sessions. Participants from 30 states, 17 countries, and 174 organizations left with a greater understanding of the cutting-edge applications of digital pathology. For those unable to attend the conference and who want to earn CME credits, two of the conference presentations, the keynote address and regulatory panel discussion, are now available online.

(PRWEB) November 22, 2011

An unprecedented number of digital pathology professionals attended the 7th annual Pathology Visions Conference earlier this month. The Digital Pathology Association (DPA) gathering in San Diego featured more than 50 presenters and 42 educational sessions.

“We had the highest number of attendees in the history of our conference, and we are very proud of the role the Pathology Visions Conference plays in the education of those in the digital pathology profession,” said Dirk Soenksen, President of the Digital Pathology Association and Chair of the Pathology Visions Program Committee. “At this year’s conference, we had participants from 30 states, 17 countries, and 174 organizations who left with a greater understanding of the cutting-edge applications of digital pathology. We’re already planning for next year’s conference which will be held Oct. 28 - 31, 2012 in Baltimore, MD. ”

For the first time, the Indiana State Medical Association offered physician attendees of the Pathology Visions Conference the opportunity to earn up to 13 continuing medical education (CME) credits. For those who were not able to attend and still want to earn CME credits, two of the conference presentations, the keynote address and regulatory panel discussion, are now available online.

The Regulatory Panel discussion entitled, “Navigating Digital Pathology’s Path to Patients” was led by Dr. Stephen Hewitt, NCI and a member of the 2009 FDA Hematology and Pathology Devices Advisory Panel on Digital Pathology. Others on the panel included: Tremel Faison, MS, RAC, SCT (ASCP) representing the FDA Office of In Vitro Diagnostic Device Evaluation and Safety; Walter Henricks, M.D., Cleveland Clinic, representing the CAP Laboratory Accreditation Program and the CAP Quality Center Work Group on whole slide imaging systems; and Debra Sydnor representing the CMS Division of Laboratory Services (overseeing CLIA).

Dr. Mahul B. Amin’s keynote presentation was entitled, “Personalized Medicine: Empowering Light Microscopy and the Pathologist.” Dr. Amin is the Chairman and Professor of the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. His presentation reviewed the role of the pathologist in contemporary healthcare and discussed the contributions, strengths, and limitations of traditional microscopy.

Recordings of the keynote session or the Regulatory Panel discussion can be purchased by clicking here.

Also new to the conference this year was the Pathology Visions Poster Presentation Contest. The competition gave attendees the opportunity to be rewarded for their digital pathology knowledge. Winners included:

Best Poster by a Resident – Bryan Dangott, University of Utah Medical Center; Automated Image Analysis, Scoring and Automation

Honorable Mention Resident – Brad Chaser, MD, Department of Pathology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK; Using Whole Slide Digital Images to Assess and Monitor Resident Progress in Surgical Pathology

Best Research Poster – Christopher Tully, Aperio, Genie Classifier Development for Histology Pattern Recognition

Honorable Mention for Research – Kate Lillard, Aperio; Evaluation of an Automated Histology Pattern Recognition Tool for Selection and Analysis of Viable Tumor in Xenograft Sections Stained with CD-31

Best Education Poster – Dr. Brad Chaser, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center; Using Whole Slide Digital Images to Assess and Monitor Resident Progress in Surgical Pathology

Honorable Mention Education – Dr. Steven Schmechel, University of Minnesota; Development of Multigene Expression Signature Maps at the Protein Level from Digitized Immunohistochemistry Slides

Best Clinical Poster – Bryan Dangott, University of Utah Medical Center; Automated Image Analysis, Scoring & Annotation

Honorable Mention Clinical – Maria Coats, University of Dundee; Optical Projection Tomography as a Diagnostic Tool for Colorectal Polyps

Peoples’ Choice Best Poster – Mohamed Salama, University of Utah; Plasma Cell Spatial Distribution Pattern Correlate with Unique Molecular Profiling Signature

Other big winners at the Pathology Visions Conference were the Travel Award recipients who were chosen based on their understanding of the impact of digital pathology and whole slide imaging in the specialty of pathology. Click here to read more about our winners: Ghassan Allo, MD; Fernando Antelo, MD; Ronald “George” Hauser III, MD; Dianne Kovacic; and Steven Smith, MD, PhD.

If you were able to attend Pathology Visions earlier this month, we want your feedback. Fill out this online evaluation form about the topics and caliber of presenters so we incorporate your feedback into the 2012 Pathology Visions Conference.

Please stay involved with the Digital Pathology Association by joining the discussion on LinkedinFacebook, andTwitter. To join the DPA, please visit our website. If you are already a member and are interested in joining the program, membership, website, regulatory, or white paper committees, please email us at info(at)digitalpathologyassociation(dot)org.

The mission of the Digital Pathology Association is to facilitate education and awareness of digital pathology applications in healthcare and life sciences. Members will be encouraged to share best practices and promote the use of the technology among colleagues in order to demonstrate efficiencies, awareness, and its ultimate benefits to patient care.

 

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/DigitalPathologyBlog

Ventana Medical Systems, Inc. appoints new Medical Director for Digital Pathology

Fernandez to complement the Ventana growing leadership team focused on advancing the standard of cancer patient care

Tucson, 21 November 2011. -- Ventana Medical Systems, Inc.(Ventana), a member of the Roche Group, announced today the appointment of Gerardo (Jerry) Fernandez, M.D., to the position of Medical Director, Ventana Digital Pathology, based in Sunnyvale, CA. Fernandez was most recently Vice President, Pathology of Aureon Biosciences where he also served as VP, Research & Development. Prior to this, Fernandez was an attending Pathologist at Genzyme Genetics and at several hospitals including St. Lukes-Roosevelt Hospital Center and Beth Israel Medical Center.

"Jerry brings considerable experience in quantitative digital imaging and is an outstanding complement to our growing leadership team," said Mara G. Aspinall, President of Ventana. Aspinall herself joined Roche in September, 2011. She was most recently Founder, President, and CEO of On-Q-ity, a start-up diagnostics company focused on circulating tumor cell technology and formerly President of Genzyme Genetics and President of Genzyme Pharmaceuticals. "In line with our mission to improve the lives of all patients afflicted with cancer, Jerry will be working closely across Ventana and Roche organizations with a focus on enabling our customers to deliver the highest standards of patient care through the most advanced digital pathology technologies and solutions available.”

Steve Burnell, VP, Ventana Digital Pathology, commented, "Digital pathology is transforming the practice of pathology in ways that will significantly impact healthcare delivery globally. Innovation in digital technologies is empowering pathologists and clinicians worldwide with tools for more efficient, repeatable, and accurate diagnoses and increasing patient access to skilled pathologists and sub-specialties. VENTANA next-generation, digital pathology solutions fully leverage our unique strengths in high quality staining platforms, assays, and innovative workflow solutions to deliver a complete end-to-end solution for pathology. In his new role, Jerry will help further shape and accelerate our digital pathology vision and commitment to personalized healthcare as a key interface and resource to the Ventana and Roche product development teams and the external medical and scientific communities.” VENTANA advanced workflow and digital pathology products include the VANTAGE workflow solution, the iScan Coreo Au slide scanner and VIRTUOSO software for image management functionality from acquisition through reporting. The VENTANA iScan HT slide scanner, launching soon, will also be integrated with VIRTUOSO.

Fernandez holds a Doctorate of Medicine from Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA and a bachelor’s degree in natural science and mathematics from Bennington College, Bennington, VT. He begins his new role in November, 2011.

The VENTANA iScan HT is for research use only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures. Ventana products are for in vitro diagnostic use for specific applications and are research use only for other applications.

About Ventana Medical Systems, Inc.
Ventana Medical Systems, Inc. (“VMSI”) (SIX: RO, ROG; OTCQX: RHHBY), a member of the Roche Group, innovates and manufactures instruments and reagents that automate tissue processing and slide staining for cancer diagnostics. VENTANA solutions are used in clinical histology and drug development research laboratories worldwide. The company’s “Smart Systems” – intuitive, integrated staining and workflow management platforms that optimize laboratory efficiencies to reduce errors – support diagnosis and inform treatment decisions for anatomic pathology professionals. Together with Roche, VMSI is driving personalized medicine through accelerated drug discovery and the development of “companion diagnostics” to identify the patients most likely to respond favorably to specific therapies. Visit http://www.ventana.com to learn more.

VENTANA, the VENTANA logo, VANTAGE, iScan, and VIRTUOSO are trademarks of Roche.

 http://www.ventana.com

 

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/DigitalPathologyBlog

Grand Guignol Spectacular: Tickets Now Available, Fundrasing Drive, and Film of Final Performance!

Above is a narrated scene from the final performance--circa 1962--of the Grand Guignol, a Parisian theatre infamous from its opening in 1897 until it final performance in 1962 for naturalistic theatrical productions merging horror and elegance, sex and death, fear and humor.

To celebrate my 40th birthday this year, my friend John Del Gaudio and I are putting together a Grand Guignol-inspired variety show that will take place at The Coney Island Museum in Brooklyn this December 10th at 8:00 PM. Tickets are $25 and include not only a night of horror variety theatre, but also a masquerade after party and complementary Hendricks Gin Cocktails prepared by Friese Undine.

The evening was developed in conversation with UC Berkeley's Mel Gordon, author of Grand Guiginol: Theatre of Fear and Terror and will feature a newly commissioned set by NYU’s Chris Muller, stagings of classic Grand Guignol plays, a toy theater version of Bryusov’s “The Sisters,” short films, song and dance, WWI 3D glass plate projection with theremin accompaniment, and more.

We are in the process of trying to raise funds with which to pay all participators a modest stipend and expenses. If you are interested in contributing to this campaign--and/or in finding out more about the evening, including the full lineup thus far--click here. Donations of $100 or more earn contributers a free ticket to the festivities, while donations of lesser amounts earn you a listing in the program; donations of any amount will earn our deepest and heartfelt gratitude!

Whether you are able to contribute or not, I would love to see you at the event! Tickets for the event have just gone on sale, so if you are interested in attending, please click here to purchase.

Thanks so much, and hope to ring in a new decade with you at Coney Island!

Source:
http://morbidanatomy.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss

William Cheselden Giving an Anatomical Demonstration to Six Spectators in the Anatomy-theatre of the Barber-Surgeons' Company, London, Circa 1730/1740

In Cheselden’s time, surgeons trained through an apprenticeship during which, they would attend private anatomy lessons. Before the Anatomy Act of 1832, the only legal supply of bodies for anatomical purposes where those of criminals condemned by the courts. The Barber-Surgeons’ Company kept scrupulous control over the use of bodies dissected in their hall, with the macabre ritual of often later displaying the dissected bodies of executed criminals in niches around the walls. Cheselden himself was fined by the Company in 1714 for carrying out dissections without permission, which drew away audience members from regular lectures at the Company. With students having little opportunity to take part in dissections themselves, teachers would rely on models or anatomical preparations for class...

Image and text from The Wellcome Collection blog; you can learn more about this fabulous painting--and read the text in its entirety--by clicking here.

Full image credit: William Cheselden giving an anatomical demonstration to six spectators in the anatomy-theatre of the Barber-Surgeons' Company, London. Oil painting, ca. 1730/1740. Wellcome Images.

Source:
http://morbidanatomy.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss

Reproduction at all costs? – Population growth and VHEMT – Video

This is my response to Kevin Biomech's video in which he commented on my positive stance towards the Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (VHEMT). I'm very skeptical towards an ever expanding human population, mainly because humans as a species are still acting irresponsibly, increasing consumption without putting enough effort into achieving sustainability.

The rest is here:
Reproduction at all costs? - Population growth and VHEMT - Video