How Old is a Transplanted Organ?

Heterochronic parabiosis involves joining the circulatory system of two animals, one old, one young, in order to observe the results. At a high level, the older individual exhibits reversal of some aspects of aging, and the young individual exhibits acceleration of some aspects of aging. The details are complex, and still debated in many cases, however. Researchers see this phenomenon as one of the more effective paths forward to identifying the important age-related changes in the environment of signals generated by cells that find their way into the bloodstream. A more effective approach would be to repair the underlying damage that causes aging - and thus also causes signaling changes - but the technologies to achieve that goal barely exist yet. Of the needed approaches, only clearance of senescent cells via senolytic pharmaceuticals is both easily studied in the laboratory and producing a great deal of useful data. Branching out from the initial focus on joined circulatory systems, there are numerous other possible approaches to mixing young and old signals and tissues. Groups are assessing the results of transfusions of blood or plasma from young to old, for example, with Alkahest and Ambrosia as two of the more public examples. There is mixed data for the effectiveness of this strategy in comparison to parabiosis, however. The nature of the interactions when blood is circulating through two bodies is significantly different from that of even regular transfusions,...
Source: Fight Aging! - Category: Research Authors: Tags: Medicine, Biotech, Research Source Type: blogs