Blocking IL-11 shows promise for extending lifespan
Throughout the study, the researchers mouse They are given injections of anti-IL-11 antibodies, a drug that removes the harmful effects of IL-11.
According to a study published in the journal NatureThe new findings “suggest that these potential treatments may also have an impact on lifespan, but further clinical trials are needed to be certain,” they said.
Still, the fact that IL-11 has a clear path to being tested in humans sets it apart from a host of other proteins and anti-aging interventions that have shown promise in animal models but have stalled midway through clinical trials. “There’s a real opportunity here to translate this into clinical treatment,” says Cathy Slack, who studies aging biology at the University of Warwick in the UK. “And that’s where the field is currently stuck.”
But researchers have known for some time that chronic inflammation can lead to diseases associated with aging. That is, as the body ages, damaged proteins and other molecules build up. Researchers think that this affects the rest of the immune system, often making us more susceptible to infections.
This infection can trigger further inflammatory responses that can lead to cancer and other autoimmune diseases.
Researchers have been studying the role of IL-11 for quite some time, but it wasn’t clear how the protein was linked to aging until molecular biologist Anissa Wijaya accidentally discovered it.
This has pushed researchers in a new direction to find ways to help animals live longer and healthier lives.
Future research on IL-11
Remarkably, the team achieved similar results when they used an antibody against IL-11 for 25 weeks. mouse He was 75 weeks old.
Some of the researchers were using the anti-aging drug rapamycin and found that this drug was good for lifespan but not for healthspan. The researchers thought their results were surprising and hope to continue research in this area.
One area they would like to expand into next is testing potential IL-11 drugs in mice with diverse genetic backgrounds, and also across multiple labs to ensure results are reproducible.
The researchers say clinical trials looking at effects on lifespan can be long, expensive and difficult to interpret, due to a variety of factors.
They will likely focus on specific symptoms associated with aging, such as loss of muscle mass. Researchers believe that aging is a complex process, with many treatment perspectives and a lot of biology still unknown.
About the Editor
Gairika Mitra Geirika is a tech geek, an introvert and an avid reader. Lock her in a room full of books and she’ll never complain.