Blood Sack? Vamp's drinking blood 2 stay immortal ?, Kernal of truth way back in very , very ,very ,very ,very LONGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG time ago? NEED young blood ??? ;0 http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21628874.000-young-blood-really-is-the-key-to-youth.html
Young blood really is the key to youth
- 18 October 2012 by Helen Thomson, New Orleans
- Magazine issue 2887. Subscribe and save
- For similar stories, visit the Mental Health and The Human Brain Topic Guides
HUMANS are constantly searching for an elixir of youth - could it be that an infusion of young blood holds the key?
This seems to be true for mice, at
least. According to research presented this week at the Society for
Neuroscience conference in New Orleans, Louisiana, giving young blood to
old mice can reverse some of the effects of age-related cognitive
decline.
Last year, Saul Villeda, then at
Stanford University in California, and colleagues showed they could
boost the growth of new cells in the brains of old mice by giving them a
blood infusion from young mice (Nature, doi.org/c9jwvm).
"We know that blood has this huge
effect on brain cells, but we didn't know if its effects extended beyond
cell regeneration," he says.
Now the team has tested for changes in
cognition by linking the circulatory systems of young and old mice.
Once the blood of each conjoined mouse had fully mixed with the other,
the researchers analysed their brains.
Tissue from the hippocampus of old
mice given young blood showed changes in the expression of 200 to 300
genes, particularly in those involved in synaptic plasticity, which
underpins learning and memory. They also found changes in some proteins
involved in nerve growth.
The infusion of young blood also
boosted the number and strength of neuronal connections in an area of
the brain where new cells do not grow. This didn't happen when old mice
received old blood.
To find out whether these changes
improved cognition, the team gave 12 old mice eight intravenous shots of
blood plasma either from a young or an old mouse, over the course of
one month. They used plasma rather than whole blood to exclude any
effect produced by blood cells.
The mice then took part in a standard
memory task to locate a hidden platform in water. The old mice that had
received young blood plasma remembered where to find the platform much
quicker than the mice on the old plasma.
To find out which brain area was
involved in this reversal of cognitive decline, the team performed fear
conditioning tests. Mice that had been given young blood were better at
remembering fear associated with tasks that activated the hippocampus,
suggesting that young blood has a specific effect on this area of the
brain.
But the mystery remains: what exactly
is it about young blood that old blood doesn't have? "We have not
identified any individual factors responsible for the rejuvenating
effects of young plasma yet," says Tony Wyss-Coray, also at Stanford.
His team is now trying to identify possible candidates such as lipids
and hormones.
Villeda is hopeful the results might
one day translate to humans since the components of blood that change
with age in mice mirror those in humans.
While "it's plausible that similar
mechanisms operate in humans," says Joseph Quinn at Oregon Health and
Science University in Portland, there is no evidence yet to support
this.
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