Originally posted by: canadageek
actually, apparently oxygen is the culprit....
actually, apparently oxygen is the culprit....
Originally posted by: Bona Fide
Oxygen as well as continual exertion.
Originally posted by: icarus4586
actually, apparently oxygen is the culprit....
Well, not exactly. At least, not as I understand it. Cellular respiration requires oxygen to liberate energy. Cellular respiration has some by-products, "free radicals" that tend to break stuff down. (Feel free to correct if I'm wrong)
I also remember reading somewhere that, as cells reproduce, these whatsits (called telomeres) on the end of certain genes shorten. A cell cannot reproduce when the telomere is gone.
Originally posted by: Special K
I was reading the life extension thread in OT here if you're curious and was wondering: What exactly is aging? Why do we age and eventually die of natural causes, instead of, say, growing to physical maturity and then living in that state indefinitely? Is it just mechanical wear and tear?
Originally posted by: MOCKBA1
Explanation of aging is quite technical. Your brain contains limited number of cells. It's huge, but limited. From certain point it can't accept more information. Consider HD of your PC is full. What to do in this case? If you can't accept new information you can consider yourself as dead. You can't buy a new more capacity HD, so you have only one way to delete all previously stored information and start from beginning. How to do that? It's quite simple, get wife or husband and make a child. So, it's a clone of your with empty harddrive. You can write some valuable information from your HD when you grow your kids.
Originally posted by: ariafrost
Originally posted by: Special K
I was reading the life extension thread in OT here if you're curious and was wondering: What exactly is aging? Why do we age and eventually die of natural causes, instead of, say, growing to physical maturity and then living in that state indefinitely? Is it just mechanical wear and tear?
In a sense it is "mechanical" the telomeres, or "caps" on the end of chromosomes, shorten with each DNA replication. This means they cannot go on forever without reaching their end. As the telomeres disappear, DNA is more susceptible to damage (hence we age).
Originally posted by: madthumbs
RE: Cancer - Check this out!..
At no cost other than coming in your food as it's rich in fruit seeds and grains other than wheat. Apricot seeds and bitter almonds (both illegal to sell in US raw) are high in it. People in the medical field I know will tell you that if there is a cure, you'll likely never see it.
Originally posted by: mephiston5
Originally posted by: ariafrost
Originally posted by: Special K
I was reading the life extension thread in OT here if you're curious and was wondering: What exactly is aging? Why do we age and eventually die of natural causes, instead of, say, growing to physical maturity and then living in that state indefinitely? Is it just mechanical wear and tear?
In a sense it is "mechanical" the telomeres, or "caps" on the end of chromosomes, shorten with each DNA replication. This means they cannot go on forever without reaching their end. As the telomeres disappear, DNA is more susceptible to damage (hence we age).
That is what they told me in my college genetics class. Telomeres are the "useless" ends of the DNA (useless in the fact that they don't seem to be coded for any traits, but they are not so unless since they act as a buffer to the real DNA from taking damage)
Does everyone remember the first sheep they cloned that didn't turn out so well? (Dolly or Molly or something like that) Well when they cloned her they didn't know about the telomeres like they do now. They cloned an old sheep to then make Molly/Dolly, and like it should they old sheep had short Telomeres, and as such so did Dolly/Molly. That was why, even though Dolly/Molly was still young (since the time she had been created) she was really still an old sheep, and not too healthy because of it.
It is my understanding however that they have since found out how to fix that problem and regrow the Telomeres in any samples they wish to clone.
Originally posted by: supagold
Originally posted by: madthumbs
RE: Cancer - Check this out!..
At no cost other than coming in your food as it's rich in fruit seeds and grains other than wheat. Apricot seeds and bitter almonds (both illegal to sell in US raw) are high in it. People in the medical field I know will tell you that if there is a cure, you'll likely never see it.
I don't follow what you're saying exactly, but it sounds like you're saying that I'll never get cancer if I let you come in my food? I'm going to have to think about that one...
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: mephiston5
Originally posted by: ariafrost
Originally posted by: Special K
I was reading the life extension thread in OT here if you're curious and was wondering: What exactly is aging? Why do we age and eventually die of natural causes, instead of, say, growing to physical maturity and then living in that state indefinitely? Is it just mechanical wear and tear?
In a sense it is "mechanical" the telomeres, or "caps" on the end of chromosomes, shorten with each DNA replication. This means they cannot go on forever without reaching their end. As the telomeres disappear, DNA is more susceptible to damage (hence we age).
That is what they told me in my college genetics class. Telomeres are the "useless" ends of the DNA (useless in the fact that they don't seem to be coded for any traits, but they are not so unless since they act as a buffer to the real DNA from taking damage)
Does everyone remember the first sheep they cloned that didn't turn out so well? (Dolly or Molly or something like that) Well when they cloned her they didn't know about the telomeres like they do now. They cloned an old sheep to then make Molly/Dolly, and like it should they old sheep had short Telomeres, and as such so did Dolly/Molly. That was why, even though Dolly/Molly was still young (since the time she had been created) she was really still an old sheep, and not too healthy because of it.
It is my understanding however that they have since found out how to fix that problem and regrow the Telomeres in any samples they wish to clone.
If they could regrow telomeres in humans, then wouldn't that theoretically be almost like a fountain of youth?