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BioWorld - Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Home » Topics » Disease categories and therapies » Aging

Aging
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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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Red blood cells

Long in the making changes lead to tipping point in blood stem cells

June 3, 2022
By Nuala Moran
Two studies published back to back in Nature have looked at the accumulation of mutations in blood-forming stem cells with age, gaining new insights into how the overall landscape of such cells changes across the lifespan. 
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Aging illustration

Multiple aging hallmarks show up as epigenetic changes

May 16, 2022
By Anette Breindl
Age is the biggest risk factor for just about every common disease in high-income countries, which suggests that slowing down cellular aging would have massive effects on individual and public health. Delaying the average onset of Alzheimer’s disease by five years, for example, would roughly halve its prevalence. But in practice, there are no approved anti-aging medications.
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Fallopian tubes, ovaries and uterus

Comparative study focuses lens of human reproductive aging

May 10, 2022
By Anette Breindl
A comparison of seven nonhuman primate species has found both similarities and differences among the effects of age on female reproduction.
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Research lab illustration

Gut reaction to rapamycin extends female fly lifespan

April 5, 2022
By Anette Breindl
The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor rapamycin extended the lifespan of female but not male flies, through sex-specific effects on the enterocytes that line the gut.
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Eric Leire, CEO, Genflow
Newco news

Genflow seeks an opening in active anti-aging market

March 16, 2022
By Richard Staines
Biotechs that tackle the effects of aging are beginning to make headlines: in January Altos Labs Inc. launched with a reported investment from Jeff Bezos. With Bezos getting involved with San Francisco-based Altos, the immediate reaction was that anti-aging biotechs would be there for the benefit of billionaires searching for eternal life. Not so, according to London U.K.-based Genflow Biosciences plc, which hopes to show that fighting aging is really about improving health as people age.
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Older person holding cane

Study reports insights into organ-specific aging

March 16, 2022
By Anette Breindl
By using roughly 400 data points, from molecular to physical fitness, researchers have gained new insights into how organs such as the heart vs. the skin, and systems such as the immune and metabolic systems, age at different rates within individuals.
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Cross-section of brain

Selenium mediates neurogenesis after hippocampal injury

Feb. 7, 2022
By John Fox

An international collaborative study led by Australian scientists at the University of Queensland in Brisbane has demonstrated that dietary selenium supplementation mediates exercise-induced adult neurogenesis and reverses learning deficits induced by hippocampal injury and aging in mice.


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Brain teaser

Carnitine metabolite has role in cognitive aging

Dec. 31, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Investigators at the University of Freiburg and Swiss startup Ultimate Medicine have identified a compound produced by the gut microbiome as contributing to age-related cognitive decline by modulating inhibitory synaptic transmission and neural network activity.
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