the new research focused on telomeres, which are found at the end of chromosomes. cooke likened a telomere to the tip of a shoelace, holding the chromosome together. they have also been compared to the fuse on a bomb, because they get shorter every time a cell divides. eventually the cell can no longer divide and it dies.
such shortening is typically associated with aging, and 12 of the 17 progeria patients studied — the oldest of whom was 14 — had shortened telomere, similar to what would be found in a healthy 69-year-old. the average person with progeria lives just 13 years, with heart attack and stroke a common cause of death.
the technology used by the researchers involved prompting cells to produce a protein, telomerase, which can lengthen the telomere. this was done by delivering rna to the cells that encode telomerase.
“when we lengthen telomeres, we can reverse a lot of the problems associated with aging,” cooke said in a video accompanying the publication.
an illustration of chromosomes. getty images/istock
“we were not expecting to see such a dramatic effect on the ability of the cells to proliferate. they could function and divide more normally, and we gave them extra lifespan, as well as better function,” cooke said.
the challenge now is finding a way to deliver the rna into a human body as opposed to cells in a petri dish. rna is fragile and breaks down quickly in the bloodstream, so cooke said they are studying the use of nanoparticles to deliver the treatment.