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LogosPlease t1_ja58jn5 wrote

The majority of the process is controlled and purposefully done by the DNA. Your body grows in stages and goes through major changes from embryo, to fetus to infant, toddler teenager etc. Your body is developing mostly as intended. As we age though, our cells' DNA slowly breaks down over time and as cells continue to use DNA to perform lifer functions like making proteins or cell reproduction, the DNA is compromised over time and the cells cannot perform their functions as well and slowly perform worse until they start causing stress on cells around them and so on until a major bodily function fails.

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orbitthe t1_jaai1zq wrote

Did you copy/paste that or was it 100% you? That was one of the best responses I’ve ever seen. I read it three times just to hear the words in my head a few times. Nice job

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Rcomian t1_ja56wgp wrote

here's a not very satisfactory explanation that i found when playing with genetic algorithms at uni:

if you don't age, you end up competing for resources with your offspring. the best way to win that competition is to generate offspring that are worse than you. this leads to genetic stagnation and makes your population vulnerable to changes in the environment.

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SsurebreC t1_ja5k0if wrote

Our cells continue to make copies all the time. Whenever a copy has a problem - a mutation - then the cell usually kills itself. Sometimes it doesn't and the mutation lives on. Some of these aren't a problem but some are. For instance, cells can grow too quickly while being mutated and that's called cancer.

Getting old is basically our body not being good at copying cells anymore where a lot more errors are introduced to the point where our body eventually shuts down. This isn't a bad ELI5 of aging.

We're not good at solving the problem though. There's some research in stem cells but that might be more like applying duct tape to torn clothes rather than making clothes repair themselves or last longer.

Think of it as making a copy of a copy. We can create printers that last longer (healthy diet, etc) but in the long run, it's still a machine and machines break.

There is another special type of cell that's required for life: neurons. Unlike other cells, neurons don't divide. So right before you're born, you have the most neurons you'll ever have in your life and you'll continue to lose them as you age. Again, stem cells could help here via transplants which is an artificial solution at best.

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Enzo-chan OP t1_ja5nv0e wrote

Fascinating, can you tell me more please?

I read about epigenetics and how David Sinclair and his team supposedly reversed the clock of some of mice's cells, I don't study the field so I don't understand anything at all, lol.

Also there are Aubrey de Grey claiming to use senolytics, NAD+ injections, and even Telomerase could work to treat the Hayflick limit, extending health and lifespan.

Are David Sinclair/Aubrey de Grey dishonests scams? I mean, can their techniques be replicated by the scientific community? I don't want to believe any treatment until they're actually proven to work.

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SsurebreC t1_ja5ovcv wrote

I'm not an expert but I bet there are issues of scale here. We're men, not mice, after all.

There's another issue which is discussed in a scifi series called Altered Carbon. Presuming we could have a very long lifespan, imagine what that would do to people as far as careers and retirement planning. It would be a massive disaster.

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Enzo-chan OP t1_ja5pkec wrote

A very long lifespan would be a headache, read somewhere years ago that our brain can only support 300 years in memory if kept healthy. If that is true I think we'd start forgetting things after 200 years. 300 years we would start sense the world aa if we were plants I suppose.

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paralleljackstand t1_jaa6bcv wrote

The cells in our body are constantly replicating themselves. During the replication process, DNA is copied and pasted for the new cell. The copying and pasting process doesn’t always go right and sometimes you run into mutations. Aging is a part of this DNA mutation phenomenon. As more things go wrong, your body slows down and becomes weaker. This along with all the physical stress your body goes through on its life.

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Enzo-chan OP t1_jaa880a wrote

So it's impossible to halt this process, as we would need to correct every single cromossome. Am I correct?

However if that is true then why the son from a man in his 60s doesn't borns old? Better, how didn't we start to degenerate after the few generations from the first living being, as DNA is always mutating.

Pardon from my ignorance If I talked something wrong.

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paralleljackstand t1_jaahfhp wrote

DNA mutations aren’t always a bad thing. Sometimes mutations can offer benefits. Think about evolution. Species evolve thru genetic mutation over generations and generations.

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