Arguing for Well Explored Approaches to Slow Aging to Not In Fact Slow Aging

Source https://www.fightaging.org/archives/2022/11/arguing-for-well-explored-approaches-to-slow-aging-to-not-in-fact-slow-aging/

Today’s open access paper mounts an interesting argument, based on the use of a large data set for phenotypic aging in mice. They looked at transcriptomic and proteomic data for a sizable number of genes in a variety of different tissues, then grouping these into phenotypes by related function, or relation to specific age-related declines. Differences in expression by age in these phenotypic groups of genes were observed directly in mice and in human data sets.

The researchers then looked the effects on phenotypes of a few very well studied interventions widely thought to slow aging in mice: growth hormone signaling inhibition, <a…

Source https://www.fightaging.org/archives/2022/11/arguing-for-well-explored-approaches-to-slow-aging-to-not-in-fact-slow-aging/

Today’s open access paper mounts an interesting argument, based on the use of a large data set for phenotypic aging in mice. They looked at transcriptomic and proteomic data for a sizable number of genes in a variety of different tissues, then grouping these into phenotypes by related function, or relation to specific age-related declines. Differences in expression by age in these phenotypic groups of genes were observed directly in mice and in human data sets.

The researchers then looked the effects on phenotypes of a few very well studied interventions widely thought to slow aging in mice: growth hormone signaling inhibition, <a…

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