Of life, that is... :)
I have a couple of sisters who want to live to be 100. Some on DU have asked, "Would you want to live forever?"
I'm in the negative on both; now I see we may have no "outs" in the game; that the deck is stacked, the dice are loaded, and it's more than just a Lady and the Tiger choice for all of us.
Stem cell research has been a controversy for the last couple of years, and one of the items in dispute has been over research using adult stem cells vs. fetal stem cells. Let me go on record that I do not oppose stem cell research to be used in the curing of disorders and diseases. I'd like to see the paralyzed walk again, for Parkinson's to be cured, for Multiple Sclerosis to be wiped out.
It appears from the research in this article in today's NY Times, research originally published in the scientific magazine "Nature", that if scientists turn off a gene that shuts down adult stem cells, so that degenerative diseases usually blamed on aging could be averted, that same shutdown mechanism would increase cancer risks. Seems that the combination lock has a booby-trap: You want no cancer? You have to accept degeneration in your spine and joints. You don't want age-related disability? You'll probably get more cancers. This research also highlights the argument
for using embryonic stem cells in this kind of research. Again, I'm in favor of this.
Gene Found to Switch Off Stem Cells During AgingBy NICHOLAS WADE
Biologists have uncovered a deep link between lifespan and cancer in the form of a gene that switches off stem cells as a person ages.
The critical gene, already well known for its role in suppressing tumors, seems to mediate a profound balance between life and death. It weighs the generation of new replacement cells, required for continued life, against the risk of death from cancer, which is the inevitable outcome of letting cells divide. To offset the increasing risk of cancer as a person ages, the gene gradually reduces the ability of stem cells to proliferate.
(snip)
The finding indicates that many of the degenerative diseases of aging are caused by an active shutting down of the stem cells that renew the body’s various tissues, and are not just a passive disintegration of tissues under life’s daily wear and tear, as is often assumed.
“I don’t think aging is a random process – it’s a program, an anti-cancer program,” said Dr. Norman E. Sharpless of the University of North Carolina, senior author of one of the three reports. The two other senior authors are Dr. Sean J. Morrison of the University of Michigan and Dr. David T. Skadden of the Harvard Medical School.
(snip)
One implication is that therapists hoping to increase longevity must tackle a system that may be hard to cheat. Any intervention that reduces production of the Ink-4 protein in order to prevent the age-related decline of stem cells will also increase the risk of cancer.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/06/science/06cnd-stem.html?ei=5094&en=db44a829e712934c&hp=&ex=1157601600&partner=homepage&pagewanted=print So, basically, the game is rigged against cheating. You screw around with the Ink-4 protein, you get more cancers. You don't screw around with the Ink-4 protein, things go along as they have. I loved this quote from Dr. Sharpless, if only because I'm a fatalist: “There is no free lunch — we are all doomed.” It's not all gloom and doom, though. Like all research, this one will have many side benefits; it may yield valuable information for cancer researchers and geriatric disease specialists, and who knows? More pure research may yet find the right sequence to open the combination lock.