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The naked mole rat: A model of successful aging (Dr. Rochelle Buffenstein — Calico Life Sciences)

The naked mole rat: A model of successful aging (Dr. Rochelle Buffenstein — Calico Life Sciences)

FromTranslating Aging


The naked mole rat: A model of successful aging (Dr. Rochelle Buffenstein — Calico Life Sciences)

FromTranslating Aging

ratings:
Length:
45 minutes
Released:
Oct 13, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Rochelle Buffenstein is one of the world’s leading authorities on the naked mole rat, a fascinating animal that has emerged as an important model for research in longevity science. Dr. Buffenstein is currently a senior principal investigator at Calico Life Sciences, a subsidiary of Alphabet, that is seeking to better understand the biology that controls aging and lifespan. 
Today Dr. Buffenstein joins host Bob Hughes to explain why the naked mole rat is such a powerful model of successful aging. She talks about their resistance to cardiovascular disease, cancer, and neurodegeneration, and what this means for improving human health. You’ll hear about the role of Nrf-2 signaling in maintaining optimal health, looking beyond common animal model systems to understand aging more deeply, and the advantages of looking at health and longevity in naked mole rats versus mice. Dr. Buffenstein also discusses the typical hallmarks of aging and inflammation as they present in the naked mole rat, their unusual reproductive activity, and what this can teach us about human fertility. 


In this episode, you’ll learn why this unique and resilient creature is a “super organism” of sorts, and why Dr. Buffenstein believes they contain the blueprint for how to live long and successfully healthy lives.


Episode Highlights:
Introduction to naked mole rat as a powerful model of successful aging
How Dr. Buffenstein came to study these animals and what is unique about their aging process
Naked mole rat’s reduced susceptibility to cardiovascular disease and cancer
Research on whether they are resistant to neurodegeneration
Central mechanism that provides generalized protection may be at play
Nrf-2 signaling pathway and its role in maintaining optimal health
Thinking beyond common model systems to learn about molecular processes of aging
Studying aging in a long-lived system is more pertinent to humans
Advantages of looking at slow aging process in a natural context
The Methuselah Mouse Prize (Mprize) is being offered to the first person who can make mice live longer than five years
Ultimate cause of death in naked mole rats is unknown
Hallmarks of aging and inflammation process as they relate to naked mole rat
Naked mole rats lack natural killer cells, which are very important for fighting viruses
Innate and adaptive immune systems
Unusual reproductive activity for naked mole rats
They have adapted to a particularly harsh and hostile environment
Dr. Buffenstein believes they contain the blueprint for how to stave off many of the adverse effects of aging



Quotes:
“A naked mole rat is a mouse-sized rodent that stands out as an especially powerful model of successful aging, primarily because it is known to live an incredibly long time. It seems to be exceptionally resistant to most age-associated diseases like cancer and cardiovascular disease. And even reproductive senescence.”


“We believe that given this phenotype that these animals are a very good example that aging does not need to be inevitable, and that they hold the blueprint for how to live long and successfully healthy lives.”


“I got my first grant, looking at how it is that they're able to live 17 years. Little did I know then that these animals would be exceeding 39 years of age in my care.”


“The fact that these animals don't seem to show any age-related change in cardiac function to me is remarkable. If we could understand the mechanism behind that, we might be able to come up with ways to improve human heart function and human health.”


“[Naked mole rats] seem to be resistant to just about everything.”


“We think that the mechanisms that protect them against aging might be the same as some mechanisms that protect them against cancer as well.”


“We know that broccoli and the cruciferous vegetables all upregulate Nrf-2 naturally.”


“I think the traditional model organisms have played a very important role in understanding
Released:
Oct 13, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (52)

On Translating Aging, we talk with the worldwide community of researchers, entrepreneurs, and investors who are moving longevity science from the lab to the clinic. We bring you a commanding view of the entire field, in the words of the people and companies who are moving it forward today. The podcast is sponsored by BioAge labs, a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing therapies to extend human healthspan by targeting the molecular causes of aging.