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Silicon Valley's New Anti-Ageing Venture Aims To Make Humans 'Live Forever'

Silicon Valley's New Anti-Ageing Venture Aims To Make Humans 'Live Forever'

Jeff Bezos has been of the many donors to help Altos Labs start its vital research.

Stewart Perrie

Stewart Perrie

There's a new anti-aging venture coming out of Silicon Valley that aims to help humans 'live forever'.

Altos Labs is looking into biological reprogramming technology and whether a variety of methods could help reverse the ageing process.

One method being studied is whether this reprogramming could teach cells to revert back to their 'stem cell' origins and make them readapt to the skin and give it a more youthful appearance.

The company has raised more than $270 million in funding thanks to massive donations from people all over the world who are banking on the company's promise.

Former Amazon boss Jeff Bezos and Russian-Israeli entrepreneur Yuri Milner have reportedly contributed to that incredible funding, according to the Daily Mail.

PA

Altos Labs has recruited Nobel Prize winner Dr Shinya Yamanaka, who won his coveted award in 2012 for 'the discovery that mature cells can be reprogrammed to become pluripotent'.

The Japanese researcher discovered that four specific proteins, now known as Yamanaka factors, could be added to a cell that would help reprogram it into its stem cell state.

Altos Labs has also brought Dr. Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte on board, who is a Spanish biologist from California's Salk Institute.

He used Dr Yamanaka's research in 2016 on mice and produced successful results in reverse ageing in the animals.

After the positive tests were completed, the Spanish researcher believed they were working with a potential 'elixir of life'.

According to the Daily Mail, he has also done experiments on mixing monkey and human embryos. He reckons he could extend the average human life by 50 years under this research.

Technology Review adds that the company has also hired the University of California's Peter Walter, who is looking into memory molecules, as well as UCLA professor Steve Horvath, who came up with the 'biological clock' calculator, Dr Jennifer Doudna, who won a Nobel Prize in 2020 for her co-discovery of CRISPR gene editing, and Manuel Serrano from the Institute for Research in Biomedicine.

Serrano said in a statement: "The philosophy of Altos Labs is to do curiosity-driven research. This is what I know how to do and love to do.

"In this case, through a private company, we have the freedom to be bold and explore. In this way it will rejuvenate me."

While it all sounds very promising, the research still need a lot of work before it could ever be applied on humans.

While they were able to reverse the signs of ageing in mice in 2016, they also produced embryonic tumours, so they are trying to work out way they can achieve the desired result without causing harm.

Featured Image Credit: PA

Topics: News, Interesting