Waduuuh mumet aku Kang Anton...

Masalah-nya....

Bahasa Inggris-ku JEBLOG, kalo di translate ke basa JOWO aku malah
ngerti..he hee heee....

Salam
AL-Pacitan


 -----Original Message-----
From:   anton john hartomo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent:   28 September 2004 14:04
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        [ekonomi-nasional] Fwd: rehat : PUASA-MATIRAGA =
UMUR-PANJANG SEHAT!!




Secara ilmiah makin terbuktikan! (MIT)




The Longevity Gene 
A gene that releases stored fat may be the key to a longer life.

On his laptop computer, biology professor Leonard Guarente plays a video
clip of 29-month-old mice hobbling around a cedar-chip-filled cage. They're
scruffy, fat, slow moving, and over the hill by rodent standards. Then he
plays a clip of another group of 29-month-old mice. They're svelte, frisky,
and scrambling around like adolescents. What's their secret? These mice have
eaten about two-thirds as many calories as their portly peers. Not only does
the meager diet seem to keep them light in the limbs, but they tend to live
30 percent longer than their well-fed friends and are less likely to
contract age-related diseases, such as diabetes and cancer.
Scientists have known for nearly 70 years that calorie restriction extends
the life spans of mammals by as much as 50 percent, but just how it works
has remained a mystery. Guarente believes he has found the answer, and that
it could potentially lead to extended life spans for people, too. For more
than a decade, Guarente has been gradually solving the puzzle with the
ambitious goal of discovering how to slow the aging process in humans
without imposing a thousand-calorie-a-day diet. In 1999, he came to the
surprising conclusion that manipulating just one gene, SIR2, could affect
longevity. Guarente became so convinced that his findings could lead to
antiaging pills that in 1999 he cofounded Cambridge-based Elixir
Pharmaceuticals to commercialize them. In June, Guarente and his colleagues
published a paper in the scientific journal Nature that detailed how a
version of the SIR2 gene in mice releases fat from storage tissue, which
seems to have a direct effect on how fast the animals age. Although
Guarente's lab has yet to determine exactly why a reduction in fat allows
animals to live longer, he's confident that medicines that cause the
mechanism to spring into action aren't too far around the corner. "I think
there's going to be an ever growing clamor to take advantage of this,"
Guarente says. And he believes life-span-lengthening medicines will be
available within a decade.
Just One Gene
When Guarente first decided to study the causes of aging in the early 1990s,
it was a topic tackled by few researchers. No one knew how to approach it.
"The early ideas, which were really quite persistent, were that if you eat
less, everything just slows down," says Guarente. But he and two
postdoctoral students decided to see if they could find a genetic cause for
the phenomenon. In 1996, they found mutant yeast cells that lived 50 percent
longer than normal cells and analyzed them, gene by gene. "I said, 'We have
a year to work on this, because I'm not sure if there's anything to study,'"
Guarente recalls. "We got really interested, and it took a lot more than a
year before I was sure we had something. We were seduced."
Over the next few years, the researchers tied the unusual longevity in the
mutant yeast to one gene: SIR2. In other experiments, they discovered that
when they inserted extra copies of SIR2 into normal yeast, it lived longer;
when they deleted the gene, the yeast died prematurely. In 2000, the
researchers found that a similar gene in worms worked the same way. It was
exciting, Guarente says, because yeast and worms are such different
creatures that in order to share a similar gene, they must have had a common
ancestor. "That means that any descendant of that ancestor, including us,
has the same mechanism," he says.
At the very least, mice have it. In their Nature article, Guarente and his
colleagues reported that when food is scarce, a mouse's genetic equivalent
of SIR2, SIRT1, produces a protein that turns off other genes that help
store fat. The fat moves into the bloodstream, travels to other tissues, and
gets burned. This keeps the mice lean and, for some as yet unknown reason,
young looking and healthy into old age. Frédéric Picard, a research
scientist who worked with Guarente on the paper, remembers the day that he
got clear results from the experiment. "I was very happy, dancing all over.
It was great," Picard says.











                
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