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BioWorld - Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Home » Topics » Science, BioWorld

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Aging illustration

Extending the human lifespan: Beyond rapalogs and metformin, moonshots at the Fountain of Youth

July 18, 2022
By Anette Breindl
A lot of what goes on during aging remains too poorly understood for straightforward translation. There are hallmarks of aging, and researchers are getting a handle on its biological mechanisms. But in a basic sense, “we still don’t have much of an idea what causes aging,” said Björn van Eyss of the Leibniz Institute for Aging Research. Part six of BioWorld’s multipart series on extending the human lifespan explores the moonshot attracting the most attention: in vivo partial reprogramming.
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Valter Longo, gerontologist, University of California

Extending the human lifespan: When big dreams meet big money, can science stay first-rate?

July 18, 2022
By Anette Breindl
In the biopharma industry, the sirtuins have been a cautionary tale of some of the challenges in translating aging research. Research in the early aughts suggested that activating them could extend lifespan, and the spectacular rise of sirtuin activators crested in 2008, when GSK plc bought preclinical startup Sirtris Pharmaceuticals Inc. to the tune of $720 million, only to shutter it a few years later. But the hopes attached to sirtuin activators have not panned out. Read more in part seven of BioWorld’s multipart series on extending the human lifespan.
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Extending the human lifespan: Aging is not an endpoint – new regulatory, reimbursement approaches needed

July 18, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
If anti-aging drugs are to become widely available and adopted, especially in the U.S., they have some serious hurdles to overcome. And those hurdles aren’t all in the lab or clinic. With classes of anti-aging drugs already in the pipeline, “the biggest hurdle is FDA approval. Then reimbursement,” said George Kuchel, a professor and director of the UConn Center on Aging at the University of Connecticut. Read the final installment of BioWorld’s multipart series on extending the human lifespan.
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Colorful illustration of the heart

Tenaya sets out rationale for targeting HDAC6 in heart failure

July 12, 2022
By Cormac Sheridan
Several genetic studies in a range of model organisms have pointed to an important role for the B-cell lymphoma 2 (BCL2)-associated athanogene 3 (BAG3) gene in the maintenance of cardiac function.
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Cancer cells under magnifying glass

Tumors might be nudged to more treatable state

July 1, 2022
By Anette Breindl
Researchers at the Institute for Cancer Research have demonstrated that in pancreatic tumors, the balance between a more aggressive mesenchymal and a less aggressive epithelial state is constantly in flux, depending on an interplay of different regulatory proteins.
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Tract mapping in the human brain
EAN 2022

At several scales, connective landscape provides lens for neurology

June 28, 2022
By Anette Breindl
Connections, Susan Greenfield told her audience at the 2022 Annual Conference of the European Academy of Neurology, are what the mind is all about. "When you are born, you are born with a fair amount of neurons," she said at the conference's opening plenary on Sunday. But "what characterizes the growth of the brain postnatally is the configurations of connections."
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Tape measure, apple on scale

Study rekindles hope for exercise pill – or at least, molecular exercise science

June 22, 2022
By Anette Breindl
Investigators at Stanford University and Baylor College of Medicine have identified an exercise-induced appetite suppressant that led to weight loss when administered to obese mice. The molecule, Lac-Phe, has led to predictable excitement around the possibility of appetite-suppressing exercise in a pill.
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Sickle cell disease

At EHA 2022, sickle cell disease headway and headwinds

June 13, 2022
By Anette Breindl
At the European Hematology Association’s annual meeting in Vienna last week, companies reported impressive progress for the treatment of sickle cell disease.
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Kavli Prize in Neuroscience medal

Kavli Neuroscience Prize honors four for genetic discoveries

June 2, 2022
By Anette Breindl
Four scientists have shared the 2022 Kavli Prize in neuroscience, "for pioneering the discovery of genes underlying a range of serious brain disorders," together and separately.
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Youth COVID test

New findings help to identify those most at risk for developing severe COVID-19 complications

May 19, 2022
By Tamra Sami
Findings from three recent studies are shedding light on the pathways that are activated in severe cases of COVID-19, paving the way for earlier diagnosis and more targeted treatments.
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