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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.

Translating Aging BioAge Labs

    • Vetenskap

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.

    Harnessing the Secretome to Combat Age-Related Immune Dysfunction (Dr. Hans Keirstead, Immunis)

    Harnessing the Secretome to Combat Age-Related Immune Dysfunction (Dr. Hans Keirstead, Immunis)

    Hans Keirstead, PhD, is the Chairman of the Board at Immunis, a biotechnology company researching and developing immune secretome products to address age-driven immune deficits. In this episode, Chris and Hans discuss Immunis' approach to targeting the aging immune system as a key driver of age-related disease. They explore the potential of immune secretome factors to restore youthful immune function, the promising results from Immunis' preclinical and early clinical studies, and the future of immune-modulating therapeutics to extend healthspan.
    THE FINER DETAILS
    The critical role of the immune system in the aging process and age-related diseaseImmunis' focus on immune precursor cell secretome factors to restore youthful immune functionPreclinical studies demonstrating the effects of Immunis' secretome product on muscle growth, metabolism, and inflammation in aged miceEarly results from Immunis' Phase 1/2a clinical trial in older adults with muscle atrophy and knee osteoarthritisThe potential for immune secretome therapeutics to treat a wide range of age-related conditions and enhance healthspanThe importance of developing affordable and accessible therapies to maximize impact
    QUOTES
    "Every manifestation of aging is immunologically mediated. It's phenomenal. When one ages, your immune system in 100% of humans gets angry, so becomes highly pro-inflammatory.""Our drug is not a stem cell. It's not an immune cell. It is the secretion set, that same secretion set that you and I have, and everyone on this earth has, that precipitously declines with age, and now we're able to restore it.""We showed that IMMUNA fundamentally changes gene expression in order to promote the expression of genes for growth and regeneration. And then it inhibits the expression of genes that inhibit growth and regeneration.""I believe that this [secretome therapeutic] is going to be taken prophylactically by most humans, every quarter or so, to keep their immune system young, keep their immune system in a prophylactically competent state.""I want this thing to be available to everyone who wants it at an extremely low price, so that we can keep people alive, so that we can keep them disease free, so they can have productive years in their golden times, in their older age."
    LINK TO PAPER
    Stem cell secretome treatment improves whole-body metabolism, reduces adiposity, and promotes skeletal muscle function in aged mice

    • 47 min
    Delaying menopause, extending healthspan: The promise of AMH-based therapeutics (Daisy Robinton, Oviva Therapeutics)

    Delaying menopause, extending healthspan: The promise of AMH-based therapeutics (Daisy Robinton, Oviva Therapeutics)

    Dr. Daisy Robinton, co-founder and CEO of Oviva Therapeutics, discusses the company's innovative approach to improving women's healthspan by targeting the biology of ovarian aging. Motivated by her personal experiences and the realization that female physiology is underserved by research and medicine, Daisy outlines how menopause is a key inflection point in the acceleration of aging in women. She explains the central role of anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH) in regulating ovarian function and fertility. Oviva's lead program, a recombinant enhanced AMH protein, aims to improve IVF outcomes by synchronizing follicle growth. Excitingly, this approach could also preserve ovarian reserve to delay menopause onset, thereby extending female healthspan.
    Key Topics Covered:
    Pivoting from developmental biology to found a women's health startupOvaries as central regulators of female healthspan beyond reproductionAMH as a brake on follicle activation and loss of ovarian reserveUsing enhanced AMH to improve egg yield in poor-responding IVF patientsPotential of AMH-based therapy to delay menopause and slow agingMenopause as the single greatest known accelerator of agingEconomic and societal impact of extending female healthspanDistinguishing reproductive longevity from overall women's healthViewing fertility as a marker of overall health and wellbeing

    • 36 min
    Gene Therapies to Treat and Reverse Aging (Noah Davidsohn, Rejuvenate Bio)

    Gene Therapies to Treat and Reverse Aging (Noah Davidsohn, Rejuvenate Bio)

    Dr. Noah Davidsohn, co-founder and CSO of Rejuvenate Bio, discusses the company's innovative work using gene therapies to treat age-related diseases in dogs and humans. In his conversation with host Chris Patil, he explains his recent groundbreaking study showing that partial cellular reprogramming with Yamanaka factors extended lifespan and healthspan in very old mice. Noah then outlines Rejuvenate's clinical pipeline, including targeting longevity pathways like FGF-21 for heart disease and combining TGF-beta inhibition with klotho for osteoarthritis. By choosing secreted factors deliverable with liver-targeted gene therapy, Rejuvenate hopes to circumvent delivery challenges. Noah conveys an inspiring vision of adding healthy years to dogs' and humans' lives.
    Key Topics Covered:
    Rejuvenate Bio's mission to reverse aging and age-related diseaseLifespan doubling in old mice with cyclic Yamanaka factor inductionControllable gene therapy system for in vivo partial reprogrammingChoice of FGF-21 for pleiotropic effects deliverable from liverLead programs for arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy and mitral valve diseaseAdvantages of treating age-related diseases first in dogsCombination gene therapy for osteoarthritis: TGF-beta and klothoSecreted proteins enable broad effects without broad deliveryVision of expanding healthspan by "squaring the curve"Potential to keep people healthy, active and productive to 100+

    • 35 min
    30 Years of Aging Biology: A Pioneer's Perspective (Cynthia Kenyon, VP-Aging Research at Calico Labs)

    30 Years of Aging Biology: A Pioneer's Perspective (Cynthia Kenyon, VP-Aging Research at Calico Labs)

    30 Years of Aging Biology: A Pioneer’s Perspective (Cynthia Kenyon - VP Aging Biology, Calico Labs)
    Dr. Cynthia Kenyon reflects on the evolution of the longevity field over the 30 years since the publication of her groundbreaking paper, “A C. elegans mutant that lives twice as long as wild type,” a genetic analysis of one of the first single-gene mutations to extend lifespan in the worm. She recounts the initial excitement and skepticism around the idea of a pathway that regulates aging, and subsequent validation of this and related ideas in a wide range of model organisms. She also discusses her longstanding belief in the translational potential to improve human healthspan, and her experience as a co-founder of one of the first longevity biotech startups, Elixir Pharmaceuticals, in 1999. Based on her unique historical perspective—and with undiminished enthusiasm—she looks ahead to the unsolved mysteries that will propel the next generation of breakthroughs.
    Key ideas:
    Origins of looking at aging regulation in C. elegans in the 1990sage-1 and daf-2 as the first aging genesEarly resistance to the idea of studying aging at the molecular levelCloning of genes to reveal conserved longevity pathways (IIS/mTOR)Extending lifespan in invertebrates, and then miceThe connection between stress resistance to evolutionary theoryDr. Kenyon's initial belief in the translatability of aging scienceCo-founding Elixir Pharmaceuticals in 1999 to target agingCurrent optimism about interventions against agingNeed for public funding of large trials of natural compoundsExcitement about newest mechanisms like reprogrammingThe enduring promise of targeting core nutrient-sensing networksDevelopmental origins of aging rates and resilience
    Links: 

    Email questions, comments, and feedback to podcast@bioagelabs.com

    Translating Aging on Twitter: @bioagepodcast

    BioAge Labs Website bioagelabs.com
    BioAge Labs Twitter @bioagelabs
    BioAge Labs LinkedIn

    • 44 min
    XPRIZE Healthspan: Catalyzing Therapies for Aging (Jamie Justice, PhD)

    XPRIZE Healthspan: Catalyzing Therapies for Aging (Jamie Justice, PhD)

    Dr. Jamie Justice is Executive Director of the newly launched XPRIZE Healthspan, a $101 M international competition to accelerate therapeutics targeting aging biology. In conversation with host Chris Patil, Dr. Justice outlines the motivation, structure, and timeline of the prize, as well as how teams can get involved. She also explains unique aspects of this prize, including the public commentary period, how existing trials can be adapted for competition, functional endpoints, and judging criteria. She also conveys why coordination is needed to overcome barriers and drive investment in longevity R&D. Listeners will gain key insights into this ambitious initiative to catalyze progress translating research into treatments for aging.
    Key ideas:
    Why aging solutions need acceleration despite increased attentionThe role and track record of incentive competitions like XPRIZEMotivation and sponsors enabling XPRIZE Healthspan ($101M purse)Timeline from conceptualization to upcoming 7-year active competitionExpert endpoint committee setting measurable functional criteriaInitial public commentary period for radical collaboration with teamsPhases: Intent to compete, qualifying submissions, finalist selectionExisting prevention trials can add program assessmentsCommon data and protocols to validate findings across teamsGoal of demonstrating restoration of function across domainsSecondary judging criteria around accessibility, biomarkersDriving global coordination, investment, and innovation
    Links: 
    XPRIZE Healthspan
    Email questions, comments, and feedback to podcast@bioagelabs.com
    Translating Aging on Twitter: @bioagepodcast
    BioAge Labs Website bioagelabs.com
    BioAge Labs Twitter @bioagelabs
    BioAge Labs LinkedIn

    • 55 min
    "How We Age: The Science of Longevity" (Professor Coleen Murphy, Princeton)

    "How We Age: The Science of Longevity" (Professor Coleen Murphy, Princeton)

    Dr. Coleen Murphy is a prominent aging researcher and author of the upcoming book “How We Age: The Science of Longevity” from Princeton University Press. In this wide-ranging discussion, Coleen provides insights into her motivation for writing this book, key topics covered, and her unique perspective on the field. 
    Key ideas:
    Addressing ethical concerns about studying aging and longevityDefining aging conceptually and how metrics like lifespan vs. healthspan are measuredUsing genetics, transcriptomics and other tools to understand molecular changes in agingThe prominent role of reproduction and sex differences in agingTheories on tradeoffs between reproduction and longevityGenetics of aging pathways including insulin/IGF-1, mTOR, and sirtuinsCellular processes involved in aging such as mitochondrial dysfunction, epigenetic changes, senescenceThe importance of models like C. elegans and Drosophila in aging researchOngoing research and future potential for interventions to increase healthspanThe challenge of complex science without excessive jargonHighlighting critical contributions by women scientists in the fieldOmitting personal lifestyle advice and focusing on evidence-based scienceThe rapid pace of advancement in biotech applications of longevity science
    Links: 
    Email questions, comments, and feedback to podcast@bioagelabs.com
    Translating Aging on Twitter: @bioagepodcast
    BioAge Labs Website bioagelabs.com
    BioAge Labs Twitter @bioagelabs
    BioAge Labs LinkedIn

    • 36 min

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