"Youth is wonderful thing," George Bernard Shaw once said.
"What a crime to waste it on children." Humor aside, recent
research suggests that youthful energy may not be "wasted" after
all. Through social interactions alone, the young can pass some of their
vigor on to the elderly, improving the older generation's cognitive
abilities and vascular health and even increasing their life span.

Although researchers have documented these benefits in mammals, such as
rats, guinea pigs and human privates, the reason for the effect has
remained unclear. Now biologist Chun-Fang Wu of the University of Iowa
offers a genetic explanation. Wu and graduate student Hongyu Ruan found
that the presence of youthful, active fruit flies doubled the life span
a group of flies with a mutation in Sod1, a gene that has been linked in
humans to Alzheimer's disease and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
(ALS), a motor-neuron disorder also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.

Fruit files are quite social, Wu explains; social cues govern both their
reproduction and aging process. And their genes are easier to manipulate
than those of their mammalian counterparts-by altering Sod1, Wu created
flies that died after only about two weeks, a quarter of their normal
life span. When haused with younger files, however, the Sod1 mutants
lived for about 30 days. The mutant flies also become more physically
fit, according to heat-stress tests and other measures when housed with
the younger "helpers." Clipping the younger flies' wings
significantly reduced the positive effects on the mutants' life
span, suggesting that physical activity plays a key role in the
life-extending mechanism.

Physical activity is well known to benefit elderly humans, but working
out in a social setting with younger people seems to be especially
valuable. Sharon Arkin, a psychiatrist at the University of Arizona,
runs a clinical program in which Alzheimer's patients engage in
communal exercise sessions with college student. She showed that her
program stabilizes cognitive decline and improves patients' moods.

So could the Sod1 gene be playing a part in humans? Wu thinks it is
possible. Besides the gene's association with Alzheimer's, Wu
found that flies with the Sod1 mutation were more receptive to social
cues than flies with other age-accelerating mutations were. Further
studies are needed to determine the therapeutic potential of
intergeneration socialization-but visiting the grandparents probably
couldn't hurt.




Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
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