The Cure for Aging

in #fiction7 years ago

Skull

Death, the eternal enemy of humanity. During the past decades, scientists had been able to eliminate many causes of death. Diseases were cured or even prevented from breaking out in the first place. The health of the general population went up and people reached older and older ages. But at one point, everybody was taken by death. If it was not sickness or an accident, it was age. Pure and simple age.

Until the day Dr. Luisa Moore made the discovery that changed everything.

Different ways of stopping death had been researched, but none had brought the final success. Aging was a complex process and many, many things happened during it. Just stopping one harmful process wasn’t enough to save the organism.

Because of this, Dr. Moore had decided to use several methods at once.

With progressing age, the number of mitochondria present in the body’s cells decreases. The mitochondria that remain usually get more and more damaged by oxidative stress, which is a result of the chemical processes that happen in those tiny organelles.

Anti-oxidants had been known for a while, but their effects on aging had been rather limited. Furthermore, the oxidative stress had been debated because it hadn’t been as sure anymore if it did really contribute so much to the aging process. Nevertheless, Dr. Moore had studied the naked mole rat and had optimized its capability to deal with oxidative stress for humans.

The next step had been a bit more difficult. Most of the damage that cells received was caused by mutations of the DNA, which could happen because of a variety of reasons. The Doctor had introduced an enzyme, which was able to repair the telomeres, long pieces of DNA which don’t code for genes but protected the DNA from eroding over time. A shortening of those telomeres had long been associated with DNA damage.

But the actual masterpiece had been introduced last.

In the human genome, there are some segments which are able to “jump” inside the DNA and thus disrupt important genes. The frequency of that increases with age – except in non-aging cells. Those had a mechanism to stop those jumping genes from jumping.

And Dr. Moore had found a way to activate this mechanism.

The scientific community had been overwhelmed when Dr. Moore had presented her findings. They double checked her results and couldn’t find anything wrong, so they approved the method for testing on humans.

That decision had been made ten years ago and Dr. Moore’s “Drug for Immortality” was finally released to the market, although to an incredibly high price. Only the richest of the rich could afford it.

Luisa smiled, as she watched the first TV news talking about the new drug. Every day, there were more reports informing the world which celebrity had started getting themselves prescriptions. Not many could buy it. Those who didn’t need to worry about the price weren’t on the news.

Yet.

But they were, half a year later, when they started to drop like flies.

One billionaire after another died. But not of age or an accident. Every single person who took the wondrous drug developed cancerous tumors that were so aggressive that there was no way of stopping them.

Enormous amounts of money were poured in cancer research, as the richest people on the planet started to experience real fear for their life. Dr. Luisa Moore had vanished in the meanwhile. Nobody was able to find her and ask her what she had done and how she had been able to hide this during the clinical trials.

On a sunny island somewhere in the Pacific Ocean, Lea Monroe enjoyed her life, knowing that the economy, the social structure of the world and thus humanity were about to change.

For the better, if you asked her.


Sources:

Conserved and species-specific molecular denominators in mammalian skeletal muscle aging
The Piwi-piRNA pathway: road to immortality (very recent paper)
Control of Cellular Aging, Tissue Function, and Cancer by p53 Downstream of Telomeres
The Naked Mole-Rat Response to Oxidative Stress: Just Deal with It


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So did Doctor Moore take her own medicine, along with the part of it that avoided the out-of-control cancer? Or was that part just covered up all along the trials after all? Hmm.

(You change her name from Luisa to Lea in the last paragraph, BTW.)

EDIT: For that matter, even if someone were immortal in the sense of never dying of old age, they would still be susceptible to cancer and other diseases, right? Hmm.

That name change was intentional

Results of immortality :p

I can see how this could work and kind of guessed (this time) how it might end. Not the specifics though, but the story was really nice again.

I'd like to mix this one with cats. Give cats th immortality and let them breed and fill the earth. It couldn't be at least any worse than with us humans. Meow meow!

Like Planet of Apes with cats. Great idea :D

Don't jump the gun. After Apes it's Monkeys' turn. Cats come later. Everyone will get to rule this planet, as long as they wait for their turn in an orderly fashion!

C3SVah5---Imgur.jpg

I'm still pro-cat, monkey can wait their turn as we let our feline overlords control the land.

I checked your stuff. Funny and interesting.

Followed!

Thanks, I'm doing my best!

I'll check your stuff too, but first I'll have to spend time with Friends.

Not people but the tv-series..

Rewatching, or watching for the first time?! :P

Rewatching for maybe.. the 5th time all over? Maybe the 6th :(

I like the idea of the mega rich being killed off by something they willingly bought and paid a high price for. Kill the masters! ^^

I thought this was a nonfiction story at first, then when people started to die, I felt a little guilty that I would want to take the drug. I guess if a pill for immortality ever does reach market, it might be wise to wait a while before swallowing.
I like the twist. I didn't see it coming. Nice job!

It's the usual issue with experiments that aim for cellular immortality: you create cancer cells really fast

Seemed rather drily informative at first, until the rich started dropping like flies! Great twist!

I believe researching 'immortality' should be the world's number one priority right now. It will solve lots of issues, the biggest of which is ignorance (how long can one remain stupid?)

Some will say there are more pressing issues, like climate change or whatnot.

But I think those are just symptoms. Symptoms of ignorance. Yesterday it was the threat of nuclear annihilation during the Cold War. Today it's climate change. Tomorrow it's gonna be something else that will threaten the survival of the species. As long as there's ignorance, there'll always be something.

Only immortality will get humanity out of their nonage years.

Immortality would seem like such a curse because after about 100,000 years it would be rather slow I think. But what do I know, the future could be amazing. I would also need to worry about the Sun going supernova. Although, I could find another habitable planet by then. More Money More Problems.

Devilish ;)

Would be nice if it were real and big pharma handed out promo samples at Bilderberg meetings. Definitely going to follow.

Intermittent fasting is the most effective way to increase lifespan. It is often found in all organisms from yeast, rats, and humans that reducing food intake by 30% increases life expectancy by 30%, by significantly reducing the oxidative stress levels.

Got any reliable sources for that?

Having the original study would be great, because this article sounds like it's mostly beneficial because it helps lose weight and people at a healthy weight generally live longer anyway. Can't find a link to the original study though so it might have different results.

I think there's some data on research made on mice and I've heard of it. It'd still be bold to say it'd work on humans, increasing life expectancy by 30% :)

There's no data that shows this in humans, as far as I know. Other animals, yes. But thinking it works in humans is so far just conjecture.

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