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Related: About this forumRare genetic mutation found in Amish community could combat ageing
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/nov/15/rare-genetic-mutation-found-in-amish-community-could-combat-ageingRare genetic mutation found in Amish community could combat ageing
Discovery of mutation which appears to protect against biological ageing raises hopes for new treatments to prevent age-related disorders
Ian Sample Science editor
Wednesday 15 November 2017 19.00 GMT Last modified on Wednesday 15 November 2017 19.02 GMT
The discovery of a rare genetic mutation that prolongs human life has raised hopes for new treatments to combat ageing and prevent age-related disorders from heart disease to dementia. Researchers spotted the mutation in an Amish population in Indiana where carriers were found to have better metabolic health, far less diabetes, and tended to live a decade longer than others in the community.
Scientists studied 177 members of the Old Order Amish in the town of Berne and identified 43 people who had inherited one normal and one mutated version of a gene called Serpine1. Those with the mutated version of the gene typically lived to 85 years old, a full 10 years longer than those who did not carry the mutated form.
(snip)
The Serpine1 gene provides the body with instructions to make a protein called PAI-1 which destroys any dangerous clots that might build up in the blood vessels. But the protein also has a hand in a process called senescence, where cells go into a state of suspended animation and steadily build up in the bodys tissues. Senescence is increasingly thought to be a strong driver of the ageing process.
Studies in animals have shown that reducing levels of PAI-1 can protect them against ageing and age-related diseases and even prolong life, but until now, the same effect had not been seen in humans. The Amish group in Indiana are the only known community to carry the mutation that naturally suppresses levels of PAI-1 in the blood.
Writing in the journal Science Advances, the researchers describe how those with the single mutated gene had 50% lower levels of PAI-1 in their blood. The scientists went on to look at biological markers for ageing, known as telomeres, in the individuals. Telomeres are tiny caps that tip the ends of chromosomes and which get shorter with age. Carriers of the mutation had longer telomeres than others, suggesting they had aged more slowly, the scientists report.
(snip)
A small number of people in the community were found to have two mutated copies of the gene, and no detectable PAI-1, but this often led to a bleeding disorder, the scientists found. The oldest affected person is only about 30 years old, so researchers cannot yet tell what impact the double mutation might have on lifespan. It seems that theres a sweet spot. You dont want too much PAI-1, and you dont want zero, said Vaughan.
Trials are already underway into drugs that can slightly reduce blood levels of PAI-1. The diabetes drug, metformin, does this to some extent, but researchers at Tohoku University in Japan have begun human trials of a new drug that directly targets PAI-1.
(snip)
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Rare genetic mutation found in Amish community could combat ageing (Original Post)
nitpicker
Nov 2017
OP
I have Amish ancestry, and find that Amish relatives in my tree very often live over 90 years
The Genealogist
Nov 2017
#1
The Genealogist
(4,723 posts)1. I have Amish ancestry, and find that Amish relatives in my tree very often live over 90 years
Even before modern medicine, it seems Amish people have lifespans longer than non-amish contemporaries. I figured it has to do with a lot of clean living.
BigmanPigman
(51,583 posts)2. My Italian side of my family
live to their 90s. I wonder if there is a mutated gene there too.
Lochloosa
(16,062 posts)3. Wine.
BigmanPigman
(51,583 posts)4. That is something that the Amish can not attribute to
THEIR longevity.