Long for This World

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Long for This World Page 27

by Jonathan Weiner


  ethical issues: bioethics and, 264–65; sustainability and, 262–63

  ethyl methanesulfonate, 178

  Euripides, 238

  euthanasia, 257–58, 259

  evolution, 194; absence of predators and, 185–87; of aging, 83–84, 87–116, 117, 146, 178, 182–84, 185–88, 196, 242–44; calorie restriction and, 187–88; of life on Earth, 87–88; of mortal animals, 242–44. See also natural selection evolutionary biology, 175–76, 180, 181–85; Methuselah breeding and, 182–84; skin-out vs. skin-in approach and, 175–76, 180, 181–82, 184, 185, 188, 265

  “Experience” (Montaigne), 223

  experimental science, 139–40

  eyesight. See vision

  famine, adaptive responses to, 192

  Fantastic Voyage (Kurzweil), 274

  fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva, 83

  Finch, Caleb, 103–4, 105, 163

  Finkel, Toren, 128

  Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 268, 269, 270

  Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, England, 224–25

  floaters, 173

  Forlì, Italy: author’s trip with de Grey to, 209–12; de Grey’s epiphany in, 201–3, 207, 211–12

  Fortune, 210

  Franklin, Benjamin, 36–37, 38, 43, 235

  free radicals, 77–79, 82, 83, 118, 131, 143

  Freud, Sigmund, 40, 92

  fruit flies, 39, 49, 136; Methuselahs, 181, 182–85, 188

  Galileo, 225–27, 240–41

  Garbage Catastrophe, 17–18, 117–74, 243, 277–79; bioremediation and, 133–36, 137–39, 141; coining of term, 144; creation-destruction balance and, 118, 128–29, 132, 142–43; de Grey’s junk list and, 149–61 (see also Seven Deadly Things); and doubling of mortality rate every eight years, 162–63; junk as by-product vs. cause of disease and, 173–74; late-onset diseases and, 142; laying down of damage in early life and, 162, 163; lysosomes and, 126–27, 128, 130–32, 133, 142–44, 173; three possible approaches to, 124–26, 146–48, 169; vision problems and, 121–24, 126, 172–74. See also disposable soma theory

  gems, buying eternity in, 241

  Gems, David, 261–62

  genes: calorie restriction and, 188–89; cleansing of all genetic damage, 278–79; disposable soma theory and, 102–3, 118; dying without passing on, 94–96; evolutionary Methuselahs and, 183–84, 185–86; housekeeping, 128–30; late-onset diseases and, 96, 98–100, 101; longevity, Methuselah mutants and, 178–82, 185, 188; longevity, passing on of, 106–7; natural selection and, 94, 97–101, 105; shifts of, when two living things become closely intertwined, 153–54; for telomerase, elimination of (WILT procedure), 202–7. See also DNA; mutations

  Genesis, 237–40. See also Adam and Eve

  gene therapy, 155

  Georgian era, 10–11

  germ cells, 244; immortality of, 91; mutations in, 177

  gerontology, 13–17, 19–20, 22–23; de Grey’s disdain for, 170–71, 207–9; disagreements over goals of, 276–79; image and public-relations problems of, 128, 145; increased interest in, 13–14; origin of word, 14, 41; other scientists’ views on, 48, 49–50, 54.

  See also specific topics

  Gilgamesh, 26–27, 44, 239

  global graying, 234–35

  God, 13, 27, 32, 33, 271; Abraham’s sacrifice and, 237–40

  gold, drinking of, 34

  Golgotha (Calvary), 238–39

  Gould, Stephen Jay, 176

  Graham, A. C., 261

  Grandmother Hypothesis, 106–11; longevity advancement in Upper Paleolithic and, 108–9; menopause and, 109–11; Paleolithic dental record and, 107–8

  grandparents: in Paleolithic, 107–9; passing on of longevity genes and, 106–7

  graveyards, soil microbes in, 134–36, 138–39, 141

  Greek mythology, 27–28, 249–50; Hydra story in, 120, 160–61, 250

  Greenfield, Debra, 271

  Gruman, Gerald, 28, 29

  Guarente, Leonard P., 188–89, 273–74

  guts, 73, 124, 157, 243; bacteria in, 39, 153–54; telomerase elimination and, 203, 204, 206, 207

  Haeckel, Ernst, 248

  Haldane, J.B.S., 196

  Hamilton, William, 263, 265–66

  Harman, Denham, 78, 79, 82

  Harris, Sir Arthur Travers, 230–31

  Hayflick, Leonard, 42–43

  Hazzard, Shirley, 211

  health, taking care of, 273–76

  heart, 243; buildup of junk in, 124

  heart attacks, 103, 204, 275

  heart disease, 104, 198

  Hecht, Michael, 158

  Hercules, 120, 249–50

  Hinduism, 239

  History of Life and Death, The (Bacon), 33–35, 50, 58, 88, 114, 161–62

  Hobbes, Thomas, 35–36

  Holliday, Robin, 117–20

  Homer, 28, 238, 240

  hope, good for prolongation of life, 34

  Houdetot, Madame d’, 235

  Houellebecq, Michel, 279

  housekeeping genes, 128–30, 132–33

  human cells, 77; Carrel’s petri dish of, 42–43; division of, 42–43; mortal vs. immortal, 91; number and differentiation of, 73

  human development, awareness of mortality and, 228–29, 231, 251–54

  human growth hormone (HGH), 264

  human species (Homo sapiens), 244; genome and, 263–65; immortality and regime of, 262–65; sustainability issues and, 262–63

  Huntington’s disease, 98, 99, 101, 195, 196, 277; rapamycin and, 192–93

  Hydra, legend of, 120, 160–61, 250

  hydras, 54–57, 59, 67, 119, 242, 243, 244, 256

  hydrophobicity: mitochondrial DNA and, 154–55; nerve cells of brain and, 157–58

  identical twins, 162, 274

  identity, permanence of, 252, 253–54, 267

  Iliad (Homer), 28

  immortality, 25, 127, 239, 246–82; believed to be of no use to species, 89–91, 92–93; boredom issue and, 247–51; continual regeneration necessary for, 119, 256; desirability of, 169, 235, 236–37, 246–66; of first multicellular bodies, 242; of germ cells, 91, 244; of hydra, 54–57 (see also hydras); in legend and myth, 26–28, 246–47; persistence of regimes in science, art, and politics and, 259–62; of Phoenix, 71–72, 83; possibility of scientific breakthrough on, 17–19, 161–62, 235–37, 270–71; Raff’s perspective on, 254–59; regime of species and, 262–65; travel through seven ages of man and, 251–54. See also mortality

  immune system, 118, 129, 142, 163, 164, 198, 199

  Indy (I’m Not Dead Yet), 188

  infants, 143; dependent on their mothers, 110–11; mortality of, 10, 12, 18. See also childhood

  inflammation, 103–4, 105, 163

  “Influence of a Sense of Time on Human Development, The” (Carstensen), 228–29

  insects, 244

  intelligence, 244–45

  inventions, longer life resulting from, 43–44

  Iphigeneia, 238, 240

  Isaac, 237–40

  Italy, graying of, 234

  James, William, 156

  James the First, King, 12–13, 31, 33

  Janáek, Leoš, 249

  Japan, life expectancy in, 232, 233

  Jefferson, Thomas, 37

  Jesus Christ, 71, 239, 263–64

  Jewish scripture, legends, and proverbs, 27, 71, 246–47, 253, 281; Abraham’s sacrifice, 237–40

  Johnson, Samuel, 11, 22, 230

  Johnson, Tom, 179, 181

  Journal of the American Medical Association, 42

  Joy of Sex, The (Comfort), 64

  junk. See Garbage Catastrophe Keats, John, 225

  Kenyon, Cynthia, 180, 181, 184

  kidney stones, 124

  Kirkwood, Tom, 102–3, 274

  Klass, Michael R., 178–79, 180, 181

  Klatz, Ronald, 120

  knowledge-gatherers, 110–11, 112

  Ko Hung, 28–29, 33, 149

  Kuang, Ssu-ma, 279

  Kurzweil, Raymond, 274

  Lansbury, Peter T., 19
4

  Lashuel, Hilal, 194

  late-onset diseases, 96, 98–100, 101, 142; solving all problems at once and, 155–56

  Lederberg, Joshua, 266–67, 276

  Lee, Sang-Hee, 107–9

  Leonardo da Vinci, 52

  Lewis, Ed, 49

  Lewy bodies, 157, 193

  life expectancy, 232–35; challenges resulting from changes in, 233–35; childbearing and, 164–65, 213, 240; defined, 12; further improvements expected in, 232–33; global graying and, 234–35; increases in, 10–12, 18, 43–44, 103, 108–9; limit on, 14–15, 232, 233

  Li Ho, 261, 279–80

  lipofuscin, 122–23, 124, 126, 132–33, 142, 173, 174; graveyard microbes and, 135–36

  lithium, 195

  longevity, study of. See gerontology

  longevity assurance systems, 186

  longevity mutants. See Methuselah mutants

  Long Tomorrow, The (Rose), 184

  Lucretius, 240

  lungs, 75, 76, 77, 104, 204, 207

  Luz, 246–47

  Lyell, Charles, 161

  lymphocytes, 119

  lysosomes, 63, 79, 126–27, 128, 194, 277; aging and, 130–32, 133, 142–44; lipofuscin accumulation in, 133, 173; pathways by which cell carts bits of itself to, 130–31

  macroautophagy, 130, 143–44

  macular degeneration, 121–24, 126, 142, 172–74

  Mailer, Norman, 225

  Makropulos Affair, The (apek), 248–49, 252, 253–54

  malaria, 104

  Malthus, Thomas, 112–13

  Mandeville, Sir John, 56, 70

  Mannin, Ethel, 41

  Mao Zedong, 261

  Marlowe, Christopher, 29–31

  Martínez, Daniel, 56

  McCay, Clive, 66

  Medawar, Peter, 64, 92–93, 94, 96–97, 101–2, 105–6, 111–12, 114, 120, 136, 184, 254, 258

  medical text, first known, 25–26

  meiosis, 48–49

  memory, 72, 119, 125, 166, 267; origin of mortality and, 243–44

  menopause, 88, 109–11

  metabolism, 72, 75, 133, 144; calorie restriction and, 66–67; detritus of (see Garbage Catastrophe); three approaches to trash produced by, 124–26, 146–48, 169; TOR’s role in, 190

  Metchnikoff, Elie, 39, 41

  Methuselah Foundation, 275, 280

  Methuselahs, 178–88; bats as, 186–87; Darwinian breeding experiments and, 182–85; disposable soma theory and, 180, 181, 183; human, engineering of, 180, 182; of molecular biologists, 178–82, 184, 188; products resulting from quest for, 188–95

  mice, 187; body maintenance and short life span of, 119; calorie-restriction and, 66, 67; rapamycin tested in, 190–92; in wild, survival difficult for, 93–94, 96

  Michelangelo, 52

  microautophagy, 130

  Middle Ages, 10

  Miller, Richard, 82–83

  Milton, John, 237, 241

  mitochondria, 74–80, 100, 124; damaged, swallowed by autophagosomes, 79, 80–82, 143; damage to DNA in, 78, 80–81, 150, 152–57, 199; defective, multiplication of, 81–82; descended from parasites, 75–76; energy food produced by (see adenosine triphosphate); free radical damage to, 77–80; gates in, 74–75, 78; hydrophobic genes in, 154–55; migration of genes to nucleus from, 153–57; piling on of mistakes in, 79, 80

  mitochondrial free radical theory (oxidative stress hypothesis), 77–82

  Mitochondrial Free Radical Theory of Aging, The (de Grey), 82

  molecular biology, 67, 175–85; Methuselah mutants and, 178–82, 184; skin-out vs. skin-in approach and, 175–76, 180, 181–82, 184, 185, 188, 265; technological advancements and, 129–30

  molecules, cross-links and, 131–32, 133, 150–52, 157

  monkey-testicle grafts, 39

  Montaigne, Michel de, 223

  Montgolfier brothers, 235

  mortality, 223–45, 269; Buddha’s perspective on, 227; of cosmos, Galileo’s discoveries and, 225–27; history of ideas about conquest of, 28–44; human development and awareness of, 228–29, 231, 251–54; law of, 162–63; origins of, at level of single cells, 241–44; philosophers’ contemplation of, 224; poignancy of knowledge of, 230–31; pushing away thought of, 227–28, 229–30, 231; sacrifice of child by father and, 237–40; writers’ explorations of, 224, 225. See also immortality; life expectancy

  mortality rates, doubling of, every eight years, 162–63

  motes, 173

  Mount Olympus, 27–28, 249–50

  multicellular bodies, origins of, 89, 242

  muscles, 72, 83; age-related changes in, 99, 100; invention of mortality and, 243–44

  mutations, 150, 158; cancer problem and, 197–207; causes of, 177; DNA repair and, 118, 119; Error Catastrophe and, 177–78; impediments to keeping genomes free of, 278–79; late-onset diseases and, 98; in mitochondria, 78, 80–81, 150, 152–57; prevention of, 189; in tumors, 198

  “My Intended Burial and Why” (Hamilton), 265–66

  Nachiketas, 239

  National Institute on Aging (NIA), 189–90, 278

  National Institutes of Health (NIH), 189–90

  natural philosophy, 31–32

  natural selection, 94–101, 110; Darwin’s process of, 94, 97, 98, 99–100, 112, 113; late-onset diseases and, 96, 98–100, 101–2; in Weismann’s theory of mortality, 90, 92–93, 101; when individual is younger than age of reproduction, 94–98, 100, 101, 105

  Nature, 189

  nerve cells (neurons), 72, 124, 126, 267; accumulation of junk in, 150, 157–59, 193–95, 198; invention of mortality and, 242–44

  neurodegenerative diseases, 129, 192–94, 277. See also Alzheiner’s disease; Parkinson’s disease

  Neutze, Richard, 74–75

  Newton, Isaac, 117, 224

  New Yorker, 230, 236

  New York Times, 42

  1984 (Orwell), 261–62

  Noah’s Ark, 71

  Nobel Prize, 40, 41, 49, 92, 206

  Nüsslein-Volhard, Christiane, 49

  oaks, 95, 96

  “Ode to a Nightingale” (Keats), 225

  “Of Death” (Bacon), 248

  old age, pathologies of, 124–26

  “Old Age and Natural Death” (Medawar), 92–93, 136

  Olshansky, S. Jay, 233

  Orgel, Leslie, 177–78

  original sin, 32, 261

  Origin of Species, The (Darwin), 93–95, 97

  Orwell, George, 261–62

  Osmington Church, Dorset, England, 69

  osteoclasts and osteoblasts, 83

  osteopetrosis, 83

  osteoporosis, 83, 88, 126, 192

  “Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking” (Whitman), 224

  oxidants. See free radicals

  oxidation, cells damaged by, 77–78, 82, 256

  oxidative stress hypothesis (mitochondrial free radical theory), 77–80

  oxygen, 42–43, 77–78; in manufacture of ATP, 75, 76, 77; transported throughout human body, 75, 76

  Paleolithic, 107–9; fossil dental records of, 107–8; survival of older adults in, 108–9

  Paracelsus, 149

  Paradise Lost (Milton), 237, 241

  paradox of aging, 228–29

  paramecia, 59–60, 89

  Parkinson’s disease, 129, 157, 193, 198, 204, 277

  Pascal, Blaise, 273, 275

  periodontal disease, 104

  periodontitis, 83

  Perry, Dan, 277

  Phoenix, 70, 71–72, 73, 83, 100, 246

  Planck, Max, 260

  Platt, Robert, 114–15

  Poe, Edgar Allan, 156

  political regimes, immortality and, 260–62

  potions for long life, 33–34

  Pratchett, Terry, 168

  predators, evolution of long spans in absence of, 185–87

  Priestley, Joseph, 36

  Prolongation of Life, The (Metchnikoff), 39

  prolongevists, 28–29

  Prometheus, 27, 28

  proteasomes, 143, 195
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  proteins: cross-linked, 131–32, 133, 150–52, 157, 163, 199; hydrophobicity and manufacture of, 157–58; misfolded, in endoplasmic reticulum, 194–95

  Psalms, 12, 15, 221, 228

  puberty, 88, 99, 101

  Rae, Michael, 164

  Raff, Martin, 254–59

  Ramses the Second, 12

  rapamycin, 190–93, 194, 195; Huntington’s disease and, 192–93; tested in mice, 190–92

  rats, 131, 187; calorie restriction and, 66, 67

  “Raven, The” (Poe), 156

  Ravenna, Italy: author’s trip with de Grey to, 212–19; de Grey’s epiphany after wandering in, 200–201, 207, 211–12

  recombination nodule, 48–49, 139

  “Reflections on Aging and Death” (Platt), 114–15

  Rejuvenation Research, 216, 255

  Rejuvenation through the Experimental Revitalization of the Aging Puberty Gland (Steinach), 40

  Renaissance, 10, 29–35, 223

  Renard, Jules, 113

  reproduction: balance between investing in body’s own maintenance and, 118–19; by budding, 244; at later ages, longer life spans and, 183, 185–86, 187–88. See also natural selection

  respiratory problems, 104

  restoration process, 72–74. See also creation-destruction balance

  resveratrol, 189, 273, 275

  retinas: derived from brain cells, 174; macular degeneration and, 121–24, 126, 142, 172–74

  retirement, 61, 97, 98, 106, 254, 259

  rheumatoid arthritis, 83

  Rhodococcus, 137–38

  Riddle of the Universe (Haeckel), 248

  Rittmann, Bruce, 141

  Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York, 39, 41, 57, 61–62, 63, 67, 182, 266

  Roman Empire, 10

  Rose, Michael, 182–85

  Roth, Eric, 268, 270, 271

  Royal Air Force (RAF), 4, 6, 181, 230–31

  Royle, Nicola, 205

  rubber, eaten by soil microbes, 134

  Rubinsztein, David C., 193, 195

  Ruddock, Margot, 41

  Rudzinska, Maria, 57–68, 129, 182

  Ruvkun, Gary, 185

  sarcopenia, 99, 100

  Science, 154

  Scientific American Monthly, 40

  scientific discoveries, acceptance of, 117, 260

  “Self-Portrait” (Capote), 249

  Seneca, 224, 248

  SENS Foundation, 280

  seven ages of man: immortality and, 251–54; Shakespeare’s speech on, 52–53, 54, 97–98

 

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