- Aging is a natural part of life that changes the body in ways we sometimes might not like.
- Researchers from Harvard Medical School believe that epigenetic changes — and not just changes to the DNA — affect aging.
- This view is supported by experiments where epigenetic changes caused mice to first age and the reversal of the induced changes caused reverse aging.
Aging is a life process everyone goes through. As we age, the body changes in different ways — sometimes good and sometimes not as good as we might like.
Scientists have looked for ways to slow down, stop, or reverse the aging process. While research and medical advances have helped increase life expectancy, aging continues.
For many years, most researchers have believed changes to a body’s DNA — called mutations — are a leading cause of aging.
Now a team led by researchers from Harvard Medical School finds support for an alternative hypothesis: it is the changes that affect the expression of the DNA — called epigenetics — that affect aging. Scientists demonstrated this via a mouse model where changes in epigenetic information caused mice to first age and then reverse aging.
The study appears in the journal Cell.
Continue reading… “Scientists reversed aging in mice. Is it possible in humans?”
