Curious Case Of Benjamin Button | featured news

Real 'Benjamin Button'? Stem cells reverse aging

Benjamin Button

Scientists may one day slow down aging with a simple injection of youthful stem cells. They’ve just proven this can be done in mice, according to a study published Tuesday in Nature Communications. The mice, which had been engineered to mimic a human disease called progeria, would normally have grown old when they were quite young. But that changed when researchers injected muscle stem cells from healthy young mice into the bellies of the quickly aging mice. Within days, the doddering and frail mice began to act like they were living the storyline of “The Strange Case of Benjamin Button” as they started looking and acting younger.

Senh: That's getting scary. By the time this becomes useful, we'll hopefully have colonized the moon and Mars for the increasing population.

 

'Benjamin Button' Leads Oscar Race

'Benjamin Button' Leads Oscar Race

"The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" led the Academy Awards with 13 nominations, including best picture.

 

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