A Hypothetical Project: the Fast Track to Partial Reprogramming in Human Volunteers

In a recent post, I suggested that is practical and useful for small organizations to run low-cost clinical trials in large numbers in order to build physician support for treatments for aging that should, by rights, already be in the clinic. The senolytic treatment of dasatinib and quercetin is the most obvious candidate, given its low cost, availability for off-label use, broad, large, and reliable benefits in animal models of aging and age-related disease, and human evidence for efficacy in clearing senescent cells to a similar degree as it does in mice. Today I'll propose a different angle on early, small trials. In this case the goal is to fast-track access for human volunteers to whole-body partial reprogramming. In partial reprogramming, cells are exposed to Yamanaka factors for a limited time, long enough to reset epigenetic marks to a youthful configuration, but (hopefully!) not long enough for any significant number of cells to lose their differentiated state and become induced pluripotent stem cells capable of forming tumors. In mice, a variety of gene therapy approaches have been used to introduce expression of reprogramming factors, and in the short term the benefits appear interesting enough to follow. As long-term readers might recall, I've long been dismissive of attempts to adjust epigenetic changes characteristic of aging, as (a) these changes were, in my eyes, a long way downstream from root causes, and (b) the research community was likely to...
Source: Fight Aging! - Category: Research Authors: Tags: Activism, Advocacy and Education Source Type: blogs