Hypothalamus region of the brain is the control centre of ageing. Dongsheng Cai from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York has discovered yet another vital duty on the hypothalamus’ already
impressive CV—it’s a command centre that coordinates the ageing process
across the entire body. By manipulating proteins within it, Cai managed
to speed up or slow down the pace of ageing in mice.
Cai’s team found that the ageing hypothalamus builds up more
microglia—a dedicated brand of inflammatory immune cells in the brain,
which destroy infectious microbes and vacuum up debris. They also
produce NF-kB, which tells neighbouring neurons to do the same. This
flood of NF-kB switches off the gene for a hormone called GnRH.
That’s a surprise—GnRH is best known as a reproductive hormone. It controls the development of
our sexual organs and the making of eggs and sperm.
Human hypothalamus
(animation, shown in red)
share courtesy: wikipedia.org
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Howard Chang from Stanford
University says, “If reproduced by others, this work provides further
evidence that aging is a regulated rather than a [random] process.”
But let’s recap what we already know, just to appreciate how bizarre
this chain of results is. You have a life-support centre in the brain, a
protein that coordinates the immune system, and a hormone that controls
our sex organs, all working together to influence… the pace of ageing?
This research follow up may bring some serious consequences as:
Given the pathway, we would not be surprised if a large experiment showed
a significant increase of cancer risk. NF-kB is a well known cancer
pathway, lower levels of NF-kB1 allow cancer cells to avoid cell death
(apoptosis). I imagine this works along the same lines.
Following sites referred thankfully and reference for further detail:
http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2013/05/01/almond-sized-brain-region-is-control-centre-for-ageing/
mb, may1, 2013 on http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2013/05/01/almond-sized-brain-region-is-control-centre-for-ageing/
http://www.newscientist.com/section/science-news
wikipedia.org
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