What’s the secret to living to 100? Centenarian stem cells could offer clues

You May Be Interested In:Spies hack high-value mail servers using an exploit from yesteryear


Credit: Nicolas Lambert/BELGA/AFP via Getty

Scientists in Boston, Massachusetts have made reprogrammed stem cells from the blood of centenarians. They plan to share the cells with other researchers to better understand the factors that contribute to a long and healthy life. Early experiments are already providing insights on brain ageing.

Centenarians offer an opportunity to study longevity. People who’ve lived to 100 have an amazing ability to bounce back from insult and injury, says George Murphy, a stem-cell biologist at the Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine. One centenarian he knows recovered from the 1912 Spanish flu and COVID-19, twice. One theory that explains centenarians’ robust age is that they possess a genetic makeup that protects them from diseases.

But testing that idea is a challenge. People of that age are rare, which makes blood and skin samples from them a precious resource for research. That gave Murphy and his colleagues the idea to create a bank of centenarian cells that could be shared among scientists.

“This bank is really exciting,” says Chiara Herzog, who studies epigenetics and ageing at Kings College London.

“It will be a very useful resource for the field,” says Vadim Gladyshev, an ageing researcher at Harvard Medical School in Boston.

Finding centenarians

  • Access the most recent journalism from Nature’s award-winning team
  • Explore the latest features & opinion covering groundbreaking research

or

share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Balanced plant helper NLR activation by a modified host protein complex - Nature
Balanced plant helper NLR activation by a modified host protein complex – Nature
Evidence of star cluster migration and merger in dwarf galaxies - Nature
Evidence of star cluster migration and merger in dwarf galaxies – Nature
How AI can help supercharge creativity
The Download: AI co-creativity, and what Trump’s tariffs mean for batteries
The Download: Wayve’s driverless ambitions, and AI models built by kids
The Download: Wayve’s driverless ambitions, and AI models built by kids
Redesigning the Nobels: what would change if scientists created the prizes now
Redesigning the Nobels: what would change if scientists created the prizes now
Bluesky has an impersonator problem 
The Download: Bluesky’s impersonators, and shaking up the economy with ChatGPT
Headline Central | © 2024 | News