July 9, 2009 Thursday
Updated

July 9, 2009
Methuselah mice

PARIS - A COMPOUND found in the soil of Easter Island stunningly boosts the lifespan of mice, enabling some to live more than 100 years old in human terms, researchers reported on Wednesday.

The remarkable molecule, a bacterial byproduct discovered in a sample taken from the remote Pacific archipelago in the 1970s, is called rapamycin, after the island's Polynesian name of Rapa Nui.

Rapamycin first came to light because of its qualities as a fungus fighter.

It was later used to prevent organ rejection in transplant patients and then became incorporated into 'stents' - implants used to keep arteries open in patients with coronary disease. It is now in clinical trials for cancer treatment.

The latest step in this remarkable odyssey is the vision that rapamycin, or something like it, may one day massively boost human life expectancy.

'I've been in ageing research for 35 years and there have been many so-called anti-ageing interventions over those years that were never successful,' said Arlan Richardson, director of the Barshop Institute, one of three centres that carried out the experiments.

'I never thought we could find an anti-ageing pill for people in my lifetime. However, rapamycin shows a great deal of promise to do just that.' Intrigued by findings that suggest rampamycin inhibits an enzyme linked to ageing in invertebrates, the researchers decided to add the drug to the diet of older mice.

The rodents were 20 months old at the time, which in human terms is equivalent to around 60 years of age.

Female mice with rapamycin added to their food lived 13 percent longer on average compared with non-rapamycin counterparts. Males which were fed the drug gained nine per cent in their lifetime.

The change was even more striking among the 10 per cent of mice that lived longest. Within this group, rapamycin females lived 38 per cent longer and rapamycin males 28 per cent longer than non-rapamycin counterparts.

Rapamycin may retard ageing processes or the onset of cancer but has no impact on the causes of death itself, the study adds.

The project, reported in the British science journal Nature, is part of a test programme under the US National Institute on Ageing (NIA), which is looking for drugs that will help people remain healthy and active throughout their lives. -- AFP

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