It's pretty easy to spot
the difference between a newborn and a centenarian, but explaining how
and why we age is far more challenging.
Why do we develop wrinkles and why do our muscles waste away?
Why do our brains and immune systems become less effective with time?In the search for clues to what is going on, researchers in Barcelona have looked in huge detail at the "epigenomes" of a newborn baby boy and 103-year old man. It's all part of the rapidly emerging and exciting field of epigenetics.
Epigenetics is all about changing the way our genes function by turning them off or making them more active.
Genes are the blueprint for building the human body. There's a copy of the whole blueprint in nearly every cell in the body, but clearly you don't need to use all of it all of the time. Bone cells will use different bits of the blueprint to nerve cells or light sensing cells in the eye.
Manel Esteller's team, at the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute, has shown that this control over the blueprint decays over time.
Adding small chemicals, methyl groups, to specific points of DNA is one of the main ways of turning a gene off.
The scientists compared the proportion of these sites which had an added methyl group in the white blood cells of a 103-year old man and newborn baby boy.
The findings,
Reported in Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences
,
showed the newborn had methyl groups turning genes off at more than 80%
of all possible sites. This compared with 73% in the centenarian.
That's a difference of nearly half a million sites between the two. Another test on a 26-year-old showed 78% of sites were methylated.
Dr Manel Esteller says the implication of the study is that very tight control of genes at the beginning of our lives may be being lost as we age, with more genes being switched on over time.
He told that "epigenetics is playing a central role in ageing" and that epigenetic changes between newborns and centenarians were "affecting many, many genes".
This in turn could affect some of the physical traits associated with ageing.
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