Robert Saunders's blog

AAAS: Can Aging be Overcome?

Members who are also members of the AAAS might like to look at a blog article there entitled "Can Aging be Overcome", featuring links to TED presentations by Dan Buettner, Aubrey de Grey and Cynthia Kenyon.

The Killifish as a Vertebrate Model for Ageing

Transposon-Mediated Transgenesis in the Short-Lived African Killifish Nothobranchius furzeri, a Vertebrate Model for Aging [Papers of Interest]

N. furzeriAccording to wikipedia, there are over 1200 species of killifish - these species are distributed through the Americas, southern Europe, Africa and eastern Asia. Nothobranchius furzeri  is an African species with quite diverse colouration patterns (which presumably explains the apparent contradiction between the image here and the species' common name: the Turquoise killifish), and is quite popular as an aquarium fish.  Killifish are particularly short-lived fish, an adaptation to their habitat in transient water bodies.  For the same reason, their eggs are quite resistent to drying out - killiish can be exchanged between labs quite readily as eggs (without water) through the post.  This paper desribes a technique for transgenic modification in killifish, an essential development if killifish is to acquire widespread acceptance as an experimental model organism.

Ageing Genes: The Sirtuin Story

From Papers of Interest - Jennifer Couzin-Frankel (2011) Aging Genes: The Sirtuin Story Unravels Science Vol. 334 no. 6060 pp. 1194-1198 DOI: 10.1126/science.334.6060.1194

From the perspective of a relative outsider to the sirtuin field, this News Item in a recent issue of Science is quite timely, bringing a concise overview of the state of play in the field of Sir2 and its role in the modulation of lifespan. It's an intriguing tale of scientific investigation.  And from a more personal perspective, avoiding complications due to genetic background when analysing the impact of genetic interventions using transgenic Drosophila has been important in my ow research.

In the news: Funding for fundamental versus translational research

From The Observer, 20/11/11:

Leading scientists have warned that Age UK, the country's leading charity for older people, risks letting future generations down by abandoning fundamental research into the biology of ageing, instead only bankrolling studies that deliver short-term payoffs.

Professor Richard Faragher, chair of the British Society for Research on Ageing, said that the move was especially unwelcome when scientists are tantalisingly close to cracking the secrets of how cells and bodies age.

Read the article at The Observer (external link)

 

Syndicate content