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Monday, 4 April 2011

The Fountain of Youth Finally Found? How Old Are You Inside? Blood Test May Tell.

une 18, 2009
(Japan--World's oldest man dies at age 113)
You know how many birthday candles are on your cake, but a new blood test may be able to tell whether you're aging faster, or slower, than you think.
That blood test is described in a new study, published in Aging Cell. It measures a protein called p16 that rises with age and rises particularly fast if you smoke and don't exercise. Researcher Norman Sharpless, MD, an associate professor of medicine and genetics at the University Of North Carolina School Of Medicine in Chapel Hill N.C., says other scientists identified the p 16 gene years ago as a gene that helps prevent cancer. Later research showed that the P16 gene becomes more active as mammals age. Sharpless and colleagues have created a blood test that measures p16 levels in certain immune system cells call T-cells.
Sharpness says it's the first p16 test for cells that are easy to check. Other cells that contain p16 are in the organs that are harder to get to, like the pancreas, he says. "You can't really sample those things." Sharpless says. "The advance here is that this is a cell that's easily attainable".
In their new study, 170 healthy adults took the p16 blood test and answered questions about their life style Sharpless and colleagues looked for patterns to gauge participant's "molecular age," based on their p 16-blood levels.
Molecular Age Results
The results showed that p16 levels were most strongly linked to chronological age--the older a person was, the higher their p16 level was--long before that person would be considered old. "Even at very young ages, when p16 is not very highly expressed, you can still see a difference with a decade. So, through the blood test, you can tell a difference between 20 and 30 year olds, 30 and 40 year olds," Sharpless says. Aging occurs well before you've aged."
SMOKING WAS STRONGLY LINKED TO HIGHER LEVELS OF p16.
"If you smoke, your p16 is higher at any age, and if you smoke a lot, your p16 is a lot higher," Sharpless says. I think it's very likely, based on other data, that carcinogens make p16 go up." Diet and exercise were both strongly linked to lower levels of p16. The more active you are and the more active you keep your brain the lower the p16 level.

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