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First Human Being Has Their DNA Manipulated To Make White Blood Cells 20 Years Younger

Elizabeth Parris, the CEO of Bioviva USA Inc, has become the very first human being to successfully, from a biological standpoint, reverse the age of her white blood cells, thanks to her own company’s experimental therapies. Bioviva utilizes intramural and extramural peer-reviewed research to create therapies for age-related diseases (Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, cancer, heart-disease), and now, they have reversed 20 years of ‘telomere shortening’ in a human for the first time.

Telomeres are short segments of DNA that cap the ends of every chromosome and act as a protective feature against wear and tear, which occurs naturally as the human body ages. As we age, these telomeres become shorter and shorter as our cells continue to divide more and more. Eventually they become too short to protect the chromosome, which is what causes our cells to malfunction and age related diseases to start setting in.

In September of last year, the 44-year-old volunteered to partake in two of her own company’s experimental gene therapies; one intended to battle stem cell depletion, which happens when we age and leads to various age related diseases, and the other intended to protect against loss of muscle mass with age.

In Parrish’s case, specialized clinical testing in Houston, Texas, revealed that her telomeres were short for her age, which left her vulnerable to age-related diseases earlier on in life.

This type of gene therapy has been tested before, but prior to Parrish, it had only been used to lengthen the telomeres of cultured cells and mice; it has never before been tried on a human patient. The successful trial in mice was conducted by Maria Blasco and her team at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO) in Madrid, who reported the telomerase gene result in 2012.



Blasco told The Scientist in an email, “We demonstrated that AAV9-Tert gene therapy was sufficient to delay age-related pathologies and extend both median and maximum longevity in mice. Many pathologies were delayed, including cancer.” (source)

After the gene therapy was completed on Parrish, the company’s website revealed the astonishing results of the experiment:

In March 2016, the same tests were taken again by SpectraCell revealed that her telomeres had lengthened by approximately 20 years, from 6.71kb to 7.33kb. This implies that Parrish’s white blood cells (leukocytes) have become biologically younger. These findings were independently verified by the Brussels-based non-profit HEALES (HEalthy Life Extension Company), and the Biogerontology Research Foundation, a UK-based charity committed to combating age-related diseases.

After learning of the experiment’s success, Parrish remarked that “if these results are anywhere near accurate, we’ve made history.” The company will continue to monitor her blood in the months and years to come, and will be testing new gene therapies to restore age related damage. Researchers still need to determine if the success seen in leukocytes can be extended to other organs and tissues, as well as repeated in other patients. For now, this is the first and only instance of such therapy being used (and successful) on a human, and was intended to prove the safety of this technique. Long term scientific scrutiny is still necessary to say for certain whether this is a safe and viable procedure, but what’s happened so far is almost unbelievable.

It’s a very promising discovery, and one that has already attracted attention from various investment and scientific communities. One example is Deep Knowledge Life Sciences (DKLS), a UK investment fund company which has already made BioViva a portfolio company of theirs.

According to Parish, “the best-case scenario would be that we added 20 years of health onto the leukocytes, and the immune system might be more productive and catch more of the bad guys.” “But we have to wait and find out. The proof will be in the data,” she said.



Source: http://www.collective-evolution.com/2016/04/28/first-human-being-has-their-dna-manipulated-to-make-white-blood-cells-20-years-younger/

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Arjun Walia
I joined the CE team in 2010 shortly after finishing university and have been grateful for the fact that I have been able to do this ever since :) There are many things happening on the planet that don't resonate with me, and I wanted to do what I could to play a role in creating change. It's been great making changes in my own life and creating awareness and I look forward to more projects that move beyond awareness and into action and implementation. So stay tuned :) [email protected]
http://www.collective-evolution.com

One Reply to “First Human Being Has Their DNA Manipulated To Make White Blood Cells 20 Years Younger

  1. Interesting, but they don’t give much detail about what the gene therapy involved or how it lengthened the telomeres of the white blood cells. I’m taking a different approach: besides trying to make healthy lifestyle choices, I also supplement with telomerase enzyme.

    Through contacts with the 2009 Nobel Prize winning scientists who discovered the role of telomerase, I believe this is the only source for this enzyme. Unlike other products that claim to be telomerase activators, this is the actual enzyme. As we age we make less enzymes. That’s why one of the most important supplements anyone could take is digestive enzymes. Whatever diet you consume, it is imperative to break it down completely. The Enriching Gifts Plant Enzymes contain 130,500 HUT of protease (breaks down protein) per capsule, much more than I’ve seen in other quality products. Because modern diets tend to be mineral deficient, it also has ionic trace minerals which act as cofactors for enzyme activation.

    I’ve been taking the telomerase enzyme for nearly 5 years since it came out. As others have experienced, I’ve seen strength gains at a time in life when muscular strength tends to decline (I’m 56 now). Since college I’ve always done 50 pushups daily, but over the last few years I’ve slowly increased that to about 140. I suppose a cleaner diet may have helped, but I think the telomerase supplementation is the primary factor. It takes many cell divisions for the higher concentration of telomerase to have an impact, so don’t expect results in a short time; a year or more may be required.

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