Long For This World_ The Strange Science Of Immortality - BestLightNovel.com
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"Yes, as a matter of fact."
That's a completely different material deterioration, Sparrow said. The lenses of our eyes turn yellow with age. The yellowing is caused by the chemical changes in the lens, and diminishes our ability to see the color blue, because yellow filters out blue light. So as we get older, we see blue less brightly. Often, people who undergo cataract surgery to have a cloudy, yellowed lens removed and replaced by a clear new artificial lens can suddenly see all the blue light they experienced sixty or seventy years before. "Patients say, 'Oh, blues are so bright. The sky is so blue! I haven't seen that blue since I was a child!'"
The yellowing of the lens has nothing to do with lipofuscin. Neither does still another kind of junk, called drusen, which eye doctors can see glittering in the back of an aging eyeball through an ophthalmoscope. Drusen looks through the scope like tiny, s.h.i.+ny crystalline dots, whitish and yellowish. The term comes from the German word for a geode: drusen resembles the cup of semiprecious crystals you find when you split open a geode. Eye specialists have known about drusen for more than a century without being able to figure out where the crystals come from or whether they're early-warning signs of macular degeneration. Drusen crystals also start showing up around the age of fifty.
That's the way it is throughout the body. You get rare, semiprecious, specialized kinds of junk like drusen crystals in the eyeball, or crystals of calcium oxalate in the kidneys, which are called kidney stones. Other kinds of junk are found throughout aging bodies and can turn up almost anywhere, like lost sheets of newspaper, cigarette b.u.t.ts in gutters, plastic bags in trees, crumpled tissues in wastebaskets. Lipofuscin piles up in cells in many parts of the aging body, but seems to acc.u.mulate most in cells that do not divide. Skin cells and the cells that line our guts are always dividing and being sloughed off. Not much trash builds up in them before they die and are replaced. But heart cells and nerve cells have to last us our whole lives. About 10 percent of the ma.s.s of the heart of a centenarian is lipofuscin.
After making his study of aging mitochondria, Aubrey de Grey was fascinated by this problem of the acc.u.mulation of junk, rust, and sc.r.a.p in the body. If that's all aging really is, the slow acc.u.mulation of damage, then it's reasonable to argue that there are three ways to fix it. You can try to repair our metabolism so that it does not generate so much trash; you can try to clean up the trash itself; or you can try to deal with the harm the trash does to the body. That's when the problem pa.s.ses into the domain of surgeons and geriatricians and home health aides. They help elderly patients with their weakening muscles, weakening eyes, cloudy lenses, stiffening joints, wrinkling skin, thinning hair, rusting memories, and on and on, the whole lugubrious list of symptoms that we all know from the inside out, and have always a.s.sumed that every generation that follows ours will have to endure as we do.
Aubrey decided that the easiest place to attack the problem is in the middle, in the cleaning up of the trash. The beginnings are too complicated. Metabolism consists of too many interconnected networks for anyone to safely intervene. It's almost beyond imagination how complicated and delicate the action is in the retina when light strikes. And when you eat a piece of food, and some of those nutrients reach a cell in your skin, all of the networks of genes in your cell that have to work together to turn that bit of nutrient into a bit of you are unimaginably complicated, too. In the immortal verse of Walter de la Mare, It's a very odd thing-As odd as odd can be-That whatever Miss T. eatsTurns into Miss T.
Metabolism is a terribly complicated thing as well as odd, and to try to intervene in all of those invisible molecular pathways would make trouble for Miss T.
The pathologies of old age are also complicated, and-as anyone knows who is in the middle of them, or has watched a loved one endure them-they are interconnected. If macular degeneration is allowed to progress untreated it causes incurable blindness. In the Western world, it is now the most common cause of incurable blindness. Before you reach fifty, it's rare, but by the time you pa.s.s eighty, the incidence is one in ten. Once Miss T.'s retinas are damaged, she is more likely to fall; once her bones have grown frail because of osteoporosis, she is more likely to break her pelvis when she falls. She is often dizzy anyway, and she has lost some of the redundant systems of nerves that used to help her keep her balance. Meanwhile, because of the osteoporosis, the vertebrae in her lower back are painfully compressed. When she breaks her pelvis, her surgeon finds it hard to operate on the vertebrae; and on and on. Meanwhile more damage keeps piling up.
But the dirt itself, the little piles of dust and lipofuscin and miscellaneous debris that acc.u.mulate in the corners and crannies of the cells, and cause the damage-that is comparatively simple to deal with, in Aubrey's view. Cleaning it up may be hard, of course. But it should be easier to clean up the dirt than to overhaul the entire industrial landscape of the body, which produces the pollution; or to repair the body as it falls apart at last and Miss T. breaks down and dies.
Aubrey began seeking out researchers who study the pollution and ways to clean it up. On trips to Boston, Aubrey visited Ana Maria Cuervo, who was then in training at Tufts University and now runs a gerontology laboratory at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, in the Bronx.
Cuervo studies the action of lysosomes throughout the body. The lysosome is the organ of self-sacrifice, within the cell. With its lysosomes the body does unto itself what it does unto others. Chomp, chomp, chomp. Producing nutrients to digest and recycle, along with a kind of microscopic excrement, indigestible trash.
Cuervo has done as much as anyone to show that the body gets weaker and weaker at taking out garbage as we get older. She has been working on garbage and lysosomes ever since she started out working toward a Ph.D. in the early 1990s. The lysosomes have fascinated her all her working life. ("Such a little fellow, and so much to offer.") Cuervo wants to understand the ways the body carries out its continuous acts of self-immolation, in which not only old mitochondria are carted off to be sc.r.a.pped but virtually every bit of the cell is perpetually dismantled and recycled for spare parts and rea.s.sembled.
Ana Maria Cuervo and Aubrey de Grey are friends-an odd pair of friends. He lives on beer and she lives on Diet c.o.ke. She keeps a shelf of Diet c.o.ke cans from all over the world above her desk and she's always pouring another plastic cup of Diet c.o.ke for herself and her guests. She is one of the few people I've ever met who talks faster than Aubrey. She agrees with him that the key to the problem of aging may well lie in a kind of sophisticated detoxification of our cells. She's an experimentalist who hopes we can make cells live a long, long time by giving them extra genes for taking out the garbage. She writes papers with t.i.tles like "Keeping That Old Broom Working" and "The Ultimate Cleansing Diet." In their campaign to figure out how to detoxify the body, to take out the garbage, she and Aubrey are comrades in arms. But when he talks about immortality, she just laughs. Immortality has absolutely no appeal for her. English is not her first language (she comes from Barcelona) and for some reason she always calls him Audrey.
"Audrey," she says, "if I have to be here five thousand years, take me now!"
In her laboratory, Cuervo is trying to understand the molecular action in the cell's chop shop. The lysosome is constantly devouring the rest of the cell and cutting it up into recyclable pieces and exporting those pieces to be rea.s.sembled in its daily acts of renewal.
Until recently, few people were interested in aging lysosomes. Aubrey was ahead of the curve in focusing on them and befriending Cuervo. She and her handful of fellow researchers worked in obscurity. Science has fas.h.i.+ons, and elderly lysosomes were unfas.h.i.+onable. The genes that control the pathways by which the cell sweeps and carts bits of itself into the lysosome are known as "housekeeping" genes, and almost n.o.body was excited about housekeeping genes. Two biologists at the NIH, s.h.i.+wei Song and Toren Finkel, began a paper on housekeeping genes with a complaint about their low status. "In most schools, students tend to stratify into groups like the cool kids and the nerds," Song and Finkel wrote. In the genome, too, some genes seem to get all the attention, and "life is a lot less glamorous for everybody else." At the bottom of the "uncool" list were housekeeping genes.
If lysosomes were called the nest of the Phoenix, instead of the trash can, they might have more glamour. Of course, the whole field of gerontology suffers from the same image problem. It is seen as the science of aging, and most scientists in their prime find the thought of aging as unattractive as the thought of housekeeping.
But housekeeping is an inadequate description of the magical act of self-renewal on which life depends day by day; and aging is an inadequate description of the mysterious way in which this act of renewal slips and declines, very gradually, day by day. And this is not a corner of our existence; this is what we are. When we talk about eating, and taking out the trash, we are talking about fantastically complicated acts of creation and destruction. We are talking about the ways our bodies, some of the most complicated things in the known universe, destroy and rebuild themselves daily and hourly.
Humble housekeeping genes help cells divide and develop. They help cells fight off invading bacteria and viruses; they help the immune system. When something goes wrong with all this housekeeping we can develop cancer; or neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. One of the secrets of success, we say, is just showing up; and one of the secrets of staying alive is just housekeeping.
Cuervo set out to learn if the decline in housekeeping is a major cause, or even the major cause, of aging. Clearly the decline makes the cell less efficient, which means that the cell produces more trash and cleans up less. If this failure of housekeeping leads to our mortality, then in effect we die from a pileup of junk.
The level of fine detail with which Cuervo and others can watch all this mortal housekeeping is amazing. Maria Rudzinska could only stare at a cell with a microscope as it grew old and filled with strange dark particles and died. She could no more see molecules than a tourist at the top of a skysc.r.a.per can see pebbles. Now Cuervo has the benefit of the half a century of tools that have been invented since Watson and Crick opened up the exploration of molecular reality. The tools with which Cuervo's generation watches the action include not only light microscopes and electron microscopes but also special stains that make the working parts of molecular machines light up and glow in living cells as if they were followed by Broadway spotlights; along with all kinds of tricks that she and others have developed, including centrifugation of cell corpses through dense cus.h.i.+ons, and the use of fluorescent dyes that stain certain streams of the autophagic traffic red and blue. Tricks of genetic dissection and X-ray crystallography allow them to open up molecular machines and count the teeth on each gear.
By the late 1990s, Cuervo and other specialists had identified five different pathways by which the cell keeps house. Sometimes a lysosome digests a big chunk of the cell around it. This is known as macroautophagy-literally, consuming yourself in big bites. Sometimes the lysosome chews a smaller bite-microautophagy. And sometimes the lysosome takes in a single molecule, which is the smallest nibble possible and requires remarkable precision, like picking up a single grain of rice with chopsticks. The lysosome uses a sort of claw hand to seize and grasp individual molecules for engulfment and dismantlement. The claw hand grabs the molecule of junk and holds it while other lysosomal machinery unfolds and unspools it into a long loose ribbon. Then the ribbon is drawn into the lysosome like a sheet through a porthole, yanked or pushed and wadded through by still other molecular machines of a cla.s.s known as "chaperones." There are chaperones on both sides of the porthole. Some chaperones wad the sheet through the hole from the outside, and some of them yank it in from the inside.
From the beginning, Cuervo was most interested in the ways that lysosomes might be involved in aging. By the year 2000, Cuervo and others had shown that most of the pathways by which the living cell carts bits of itself to the lysosomes for demolition and recycling do decline with age. The cells of young laboratory rats work twice as hard as old rats' at carting bits of their cells to their lysosomes. The lysosomes in old cells grow swollen and frail. They fill with aging pigments, along with other indigestible junk, including the stuff that free radicals make as they carom into molecules inside the cell, leaving them tangled and cross-linked in ways the lysosomes can't cleave and dismantle. One of the simplest kinds of detritus that acc.u.mulates in our bodies is the kind that makes our skin wrinkle. In the United States alone the market for what are now called "cosmeceuticals" is more than $8 billion a year for ointments that try to do what the first ointment claimed to do on the banks of the Nile in 1500 B.C B.C. And the cause of our wrinkles is such a very simple thing. What makes our skin supple and smooth is a protein called collagen, as anyone knows who has read the ads and the labels of the antiwrinkle ointments. Each collagen protein is a molecule shaped something like a long rope. The ropes are very strong and they are arranged in the skin in great woven nets, something like the nets of rope baskets. Unlike rope baskets, however, they are alive. As part of our living bodies, part of the bright burning life of the Phoenix, they are continually made and destroyed. Unfortunately, as time goes on, they are made less well, less accurately. They tangle with each other at the edges. They collect what are known as cross-links, which are tiny ties that join one rope to its neighboring rope and stiffen the whole net. This is what makes our skin stiffen and wrinkle-and inside our bodies, too, daily, nightly, in each of our internal organs, in our arteries and veins, in the kidneys, the liver, the eyes, the brain, the same unfortunate cross-linking goes on, with results that can be much more serious than wrinkles. These cross-links are known in the jargon as advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs).
When we're young we have a spring in our step, as we say. Actually, we have a million springs that put that bounce in our steps. Picture what would happen to a spring or a Slinky over time if you stapled more and more of its coils together, at random. Eventually the body is not very springy, or slinky, anymore.
It may also be that the cell, as it gets older, grows less nimble and deft at the crucial folding operations that produce the elegant origami of its molecules in the first place, so that there is more and more crumpled, badly folded trash for the lysosome to handle and dispose of. Chaperones inside the cell are actually able to decide if a given bit of origami is close enough to right in its folds to be worth fiddling with, or if the whole thing is such a botch that it would be better off chucked. And if the cell can't make enough well-folded origami, and if the lysosome can't split the stuff up and spit it back out to be recycled, then the cell has less raw material with which to try again with fresh origami. So the cell begins to weaken at both self-creation and self-destruction. The one can't suffer without hurting the other. You can't be creative without tools, fuel, and quality control. To make good things, you have to throw bad things out. As Isaac Bashevis Singer once said, a writer's best friend is the waste-basket.
Aubrey thought about housekeeping genes, and he thought about all the commonplace trash that escapes the broom and gathers in the corners, like molecules of lipofuscin, which litter billions of aging cells like little b.a.l.l.s of dust. Although lipofuscin is a confusing substance to biologists, it is clearly related to metabolism, since it acc.u.mulates inside our lysosomes as we get older. "That says it's not doing any good," Aubrey says. "Even lysosomes can't break it down. In spite of having about sixty different enzymes to break things down." Lipofuscin is like the dust in the corner that the blunt broom can't get at. It is like a spoon or fork in the garbage disposal, or the wad of glop in the S curve of a drain.
Eventually Aubrey hit on a way to deal with this particular garbage problem. The idea came to him in an epiphany. It was the end of a long day's journey with a duffel bag. He was attending the 1999 Annual Meeting of the Society for Free Radical Research, in Dresden. Aubrey had already been brooding about the kinds of specialized shears and scissors that might help to cut the cross-links in AGEs, the kind of junk that gives us wrinkles. Suddenly in Dresden it struck him, he says, that all of this junk is cross-linked. All of it is the by-product of metabolism. All of it is crazed and crumpled molecular origami. The body's problem throughout-in the skin, the heart, the nerves-is that it has never evolved the proper tools for uncrumpling the most tightly wadded sheets, snipping the most tangled tangles, the toughest chains in the cross-links. And the reason the body has not evolved the tools is that it has not needed to do so. All this junk acc.u.mulates gradually, on the whole. It is not a problem for the body until midlife or beyond.
And it dawned on Aubrey that he knew the man to fix the problem. He knew a good man in the genetics department in Cambridge, John Archer. Archer searches for soil microbes that can devour toxins that we are unable to seek out and destroy ourselves. He is a specialist in the field known as bioremediation, or environmental biotechnology. It is becoming possible in some cases to decontaminate soil that has been poisoned by dioxins: bioremediation experts have genetically engineered microbes that eat dioxin. Likewise, they have ways to clean water of PCPs, using still other poison-loving microbes. All of these pollutants, bizarrely, can be broken down by microbes.
Rubber! Go to the side of the highway. Very tiny bits of rubber are continually flayed from spinning tires of cars and acc.u.mulating on the side of the highway. Specialized microbes have evolved there in the speeding shadows of our cars and trucks and they feast on the rubber dust. You can find bacteria there that will eat it. If you are looking for enzymes to dispose of rubber, that's a good place, among the microbes of the roadsides. The microbes have already found the answer-so you can collect them from the grunge at the side of the road, and raise them in petri dishes, and study all of the tricks for the disposal of rubber that evolution has discovered.
If roadsides are the places to look for the secrets of the disposal of rubber, then where are the places to look when you are concerned with the disposable soma-when your problem is the decades of acc.u.mulated trash in each and every human, mortal, disposable body? Where have we mortals disposed of this tragic debris for generation upon generation upon generation?
Graveyards.
Aubrey's hometown is rich in old graveyards, including Coldham's Common, where the people of Cambridge buried many generations of their dead, including corpses from their leper colony in the twelfth century, along with victims of the Black Death; and in the seventeenth century, the Great Plague. Midsummer Common is another h.o.a.ry Cambridge graveyard. Aubrey thought of the planet's most notorious ma.s.s graves, from Rwanda to Cambodia to Dresden itself.
In the meeting that day in Dresden, one of the presenters was Ulf T. Brunk, chair of pathology at Sweden's University of Linkoping. At the meeting in Dresden, Brunk showed slide after slide of elderly cells clogged with lipofuscin. The stuff glowed a dull red on his slides. Lipofuscin is Brunk's specialty.
Aubrey was sipping coffee after Brunk's talk when the thought came to him, and he hurried across the conference room.
"Listen, Ulf, I've just had the most fabulous idea..."
Ulf's reaction disappointed Aubrey. Ulf seemed rather cool about the idea of prospecting for a cure for aging in graveyards. Aubrey put it down to Nordic caution.
After he got home to Cambridge, Aubrey shared the idea with Archer, who saw Aubrey's point immediately. Archer summed it up in a single line: "Why don't graveyards glow in the dark?" So many centuries of lipofuscin-laden remains have been buried there. They are the repositories of all of the tangled, mangled, ruined molecules that we the living (while we were still aboveground) had never quite managed to dispose of ourselves. And yet the soil of our graveyards does not fluoresce. After eighty, our retinas are fluorescent too, because of their loads of lipofuscin. Graveyards should be full of the stuff, and yet they do not glow. Obviously, microbes in the soil must have found ways and means to work through the coffin-lids and the winding sheets and cerements and devour the very last of the debris. After all, our bones are picked clean by the scavengers in the soils of graveyards. They whittle us down to skeletons as we rot. So Aubrey proposed that we dig in the old graveyards and look for the secret in the bacteria that have evolved there. Steal the tools from the Lord of the Underworld, from the Devil's workshop.
Aubrey was not the first gerontologist to follow his thoughts a little farther into the grave than most of us like to go. Medawar had gone there before him. In his essay "Old Age and Natural Death," Medawar talks about the difficulty of defining the moment of death. He points out that because we are made up of trillions of tiny living cells, some of them are bound to survive us for a long time after the doctors p.r.o.nounce us dead, "and those whose most pressing fear it is that they will be lowered living into their graves can have their doubts resolved: they will be."
This was the way Aubrey did science. He worked away in the Department of Genetics, like a newfangled scribe, on a great compendium called FlyBase, entering lines of computer code that define the genes and mutations of the fruit fly. Now and then he went das.h.i.+ng up and down the old spiral stairs, elvishly, to visit Archer, or to drop in on his wife, Adelaide, at her tiny lab under a stairway leading to the roof, and try out a new idea.
"Well, I mean, it's deucedly simple, really," John Archer said, when Aubrey and I dropped in on him at his lab in the summer of 2004. Computers hummed on the desktop. Archer was running genomes. That took a lot of computer power. So the little room was warm, in spite of the labors of an expensive air conditioner of the same make and model as the ones that cool the sealed capsules of the London Eye, also known as the Millennium Wheel. Archer wore an Izod s.h.i.+rt, khakis, an ID around his neck. Everything about him said solid, a man with his feet planted on terra firma. Whereas Aubrey had, as always, that millennial hippie look. He wore a red "Drosophila" T-s.h.i.+rt over a flowered Hawaiian s.h.i.+rt, with a red elastic for his ponytail.
Archer is an expert on the metabolism of explosives. He explained to me that soil around military camps may be contaminated with nuggets of TNT as big as an inch in diameter. When rainwater pools on ground that is loaded with TNT, it turns a telltale pink. To cure the soil of these explosives and poisons, some specialists work on sowing these fields with plants, including the wild tomato and the downy thorn apple, known in the Wild West as jimsonweed. Jimsonweed will take the pink out of a jar of pink water overnight. Some army bases now try to keep their poisons from seeping downward into the groundwater by planting trees that suck them upward.
Archer prefers to work with a kind of bacteria called Rhodococcus, which is a master at the digestion of TNT. Archer feeds it pink water and watches what happens. ("Get a little drop of that on you and you're going to have an interesting time at Heathrow," Archer said.) Strains of Rhodococcus are robust and diverse and can eat up a wonderfully wide variety of explosives, poisons, and potions, including quinolone, some particularly stubborn thiocarbamate herbicides, and a chemical called 2-mercaptobenzothiazole, which is used in the manufacture of vulcanized rubber. Strains of Rhodococcus are the only bacteria known to eat benzothiophene and dibenzothiophene. They thrive in ethanol. Archer is proud of Rhodococcus, of its hardihood and its appet.i.tes. He keeps collections of polluted waters ("It's wicked, wicked stuff!") and he keeps potent antidote strains of Rhodococcus. He likes to talk like a plumber-he says that's what he would probably have been a few centuries ago, an engineer tending the drains of some lord's manor house. "When these first started growing, they et the petri dish," Archer said, in mock-peasant style, pointing at one of his favorite strains. "Et it right up. They melted the petri dish and drank the solvent." He boasted about the Rhodococcal metabolism. Our bodies can't do a tenth of what his Rhodococcus can do when it comes to digesting explosives. "Humans are pathetic," Archer said. We may be more complicated than bacteria, he said, "but metabolically we're c.r.a.p."
Bacteria are so gifted metabolically because they are far more diverse than we are, Archer explained. Four-point-eight billion years ago this planet was nothing but rock. Four and a half billion years ago, the planet came to life. Most life-forms are still devoted to being unicellular. Bacteria are phenomenally diverse. They made the world, and they will inherit it-they'll still be here when we're gone. "I mean, my G.o.d, you know we're really Johnny-come-lately," Archer said. "We just got here." Bacteria have been fine-tuning their DNA for four and a half billion years.
"Soil is more active than you'd ever realize," said Archer in a hushed voice. "Tremendous energy."
Archer was very impressed by Aubrey's energy, too, but he hadn't done much with his graveyard idea. He had gone as far as to send a student to Midsummer Common with a trowel. There the bodies of plague victims of Cambridge have lain moldering for centuries. And he had done a preliminary experiment. Beyond that the soil samples from the graveyard were still sitting around in his refrigerator. Aubrey's idea was only one of many projects that Archer could take up, and he did not seem in a hurry to do much with this one, when he had so many other experiments of his own to try.
This is one of the hazards of being a theoretical biologist like Aubrey. You have to interest people with laboratories to take up your ideas, and they tend to have ideas and projects of their own. Hands-on biologists often remind Aubrey how hard it is to make things work in the laboratory. They're inching up the mountain while Aubrey dreams of landing up there in one stride with his seven-league boots.
They tell Aubrey, "It's a grim life doing experiments."
"C'est la vie," says Aubrey. says Aubrey.
From Adelaide, Aubrey might have learned some humility about the difficulty of doing experiments. Years had pa.s.sed since her brilliant start as a geneticist, her discovery of a particle within life's machinery; which had looked to her at first in her slides like a speck of dirt. That particle of molecular machinery helps to shuffle the genes in flies, mice, oaks, and people. She named it the recombination nodule. She was still famous in some quarters. But now, after that early success, she spent months or sometimes as much as a year as a technician in the genetics building, trying to unravel what had gone wrong with someone else's experiments-because experiments don't always work out. She labored under the eaves on the top floor of the Department of Genetics. She had a little nook beneath the stairs, with books stacked under the stairs, along with piles on piles of boxes, equipment, papers, books, tissues, yellow pads, pens, pencils, light-bulbs, a crumpled scarf, and an old bra.s.s magnifying gla.s.s with a wooden handle. Her desk was a few steps away from her fruit fly emporium, with a microscope, and an etherizer, everything she needs for breeding and sorting flies, and fixing the experiments of students whose work refused to go-projects that were failing to progress in anyone else's hands.
Computer programs can also provide lessons in humility. Aubrey's friend Aaron Turner was still struggling toward their dream of the Cure-All, the computer program that would cure all other computer programs. When their branch of Sinclair Research was sold, Aubrey and Aaron had created a two-man company they called Man-Made-Minions and begun racing to develop the Cure-All. In the beginning of their collaboration, they often met at the Eagle or the Live & Let Live for pool, with beer (for Aubrey) and c.o.ke (for Aaron), and talked of all things AI. Now Aubrey was saving the world from death (whether or not the world wanted saving). Poor Aaron was living out of his car, and quoting sardonic sayings of the computer trade, such as Hofstadter's Law: "It always takes longer than you expect, even when you take into account Hofstadter's Law." Aaron slogged away at the prototype of the Cure-All, with moral support and occasional cash from Aubrey, who still served as codirector of Man-Made-Minions. Aaron has since written a memoir of the Cure-All adventure. The final section of his memoir is t.i.tled, "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow Creeps in This Petty Pace from Day to Day."
Nevertheless, both Adelaide and Aaron indulged Aubrey's hopes of the Cure-All of Cure-Alls. They admired him. Someday it might be Aubrey's turn to have his words on display in the Eagle, like James Watson and Francis Crick, when he had found the secret of eternal life. Someday it might be Aubrey's turn, like the young pilots of the Battle of Britain, to place a chair on a table, stand on the chair, and sign or singe his extraordinary name across the ceiling. Justify your existence!
John Archer told me that he found Aubrey's idea provocative enough to be worth taking up in an experiment in his laboratory-not as a major experiment, but a Friday experiment, as he put it. It seemed to me that Archer was almost as uncertain about Aubrey's ideas as I was, although he spoke about him with great warmth and enthusiasm. "Now, Aubrey has phenomenal energy," Archer said, "and the trouble with science is-" He plunged into a colorful tirade about the faults and conservatisms of scientists, who can't see past their own noses, and who eat their young. Here you have a bright young man of spirit, a newcomer whose views are just a wee bit novel, and what do his elders choose to do but gather round and devour the poor lad alive. "In reality we need more Aubreys, G.o.d help us. Chaps like him who can see over the hedges. What we've got here is a Renaissance man. Missed his century by a few hundred years."
Since then, by dint of persistence and propaganda, Aubrey has managed to get some high-level scientists to take up his graveyard idea, the microbial remediation of the aging body. There is a bioremediation program exploring Aubrey's idea at Rice University; and another at Arizona State University, led by Bruce Rittmann, one of the world's leaders in bioengineering and bioremediation. Rittmann is an authority on breeding bacteria to clean up Superfund sites. On the side he's now trying to clean up aging cells.
The field as a whole-the study of good housekeeping as the key to good aging-has grown a great deal in the years since Aubrey began championing it. When old cells begin to fumble with their molecules, whether in the course of construction or destruction, creation or demolition, they can accidentally make junk that is bad for them. A certain protein that most cells manufacture daily for use in their membranes, a protein as commonplace and crucial in the membranes as plywood sheeting in the walls of construction sites (although n.o.body knows what it is for) can get accidentally misfolded to form the junk called beta-amyloid that acc.u.mulates between the brain cells of people with Alzheimer's disease. Beta-amyloid is badly handled by those garbage-disposal units the lysosomes. It builds up in the brain in deposits like drifts and junk heaps. Trouble with lysosomes may be a cause of the buildup. Failing lysosomes may also help hasten late-onset diseases like diabetes, thyroid problems, and the weakening of the immune system. And of course the aging pigment lipofuscin also builds up in old retinas and causes macular degeneration.
Confusing things can happen in lysosomes, as in the fog of war. Cells can use them to devour invading parasites like the bacteria streptococcus. On the other hand, a cell that has been hurt or poisoned may devour a good part of its own substance and die. n.o.body knows whether the cell is trying to kill itself or heal itself. Apparently the very same mechanism can promote survival and promote death. Perhaps when the cell devours itself too fast to rebuild, it dies.
It may be that our ability to maintain a healthy balance between the creation and destruction of molecules is what makes the difference, at the very finest scale of mortality, where we are examining life and death virtually one molecule at a time. Specialists in the lysosome, along with another cellular disposal unit, a stout, barrel-shaped structure called the proteasome, like to argue that housekeeping may turn out to be at the heart of it all. Many gerontologists think the Good Housekeeping people are a bit too enthusiastic; they think the self-cleaning, self-devouring work of autophagy is only a part of the problem of mortality. But it is certainly true that autophagy plays a role during the body's time of growth, from embryo through youth to maturity. It is one of the ways the body sculptures itself to produce its final form, carving away webs between the fingers of the young embryo to produce the hand, or whittling away excess neurons from the brain of the infant to produce and refine each working mind. The machinery of autophagy is also important when aliens invade; when bacteria and viruses intrude on the body, some of the defensive work of demolition is done by autophagy. And autophagy is crucial at every moment of our lives in the nest of the Phoenix, where we are continually consumed and reborn. But our bodies are not designed to do it perfectly forever because our whole bodies are, in the last a.n.a.lysis, disposable.
It is easy to see how trouble in lysosomes might spiral out of control as we get older. For instance, free radical damage may interfere with the lysosome's ability to digest big bites of the cell-macroautophagy. Then, because the lysosome can't handle those big bites of the cell, more free radical damage builds up around it. When a cell is young, these bites really are gigantic. A healthy young lysosome can swallow a mitochondrion-it can take in a whole factory in one gulp. Because an aged lysosome can't do that, more mitochondria that need sc.r.a.pping may sit around unsc.r.a.pped. And because the cell can't swallow large chunks of itself at one go, billions of smaller molecular machines inside the cell have a longer "dwell time." They sit around longer, increasing the chances that they will get bunged up and malfunction and make other stuff badly, which will then sit around, too, mucking things up.
In Sweden, Ulf Brunk and Alexei Terman, a colleague of Brunk's at the University of Linkoping, have coined a name for the hypothesis that it is junk that gets us, trash that brings us down. In their hypothesis, the more garbage there is in the cell, the less efficient its metabolism. As all good housekeepers know, each bit of junk you leave lying around makes it more likely that there will be more junk lying on top of it or to the side of it, c.r.a.p piling on c.r.a.p. At last you get an explosion of junk, according to Brunk and Terman.
They call this the Garbage Catastrophe.
Chapter 7.
THE SEVEN DEADLY THINGS.
In the summer of 2000, Aubrey de Grey was invited to give a talk at a meeting in Los Angeles focusing on what to do about aging and how to bring all these lines of work together into a single research program. At the Marriott Hotel in Manhattan Beach, speaker after speaker presented hourlong talks reviewing one aspect of the aging problem or another. Each speaker a.n.a.lyzed one line of work without much reference to the others. As he listened, Aubrey felt demoralized. This really is a public-relations problem for the science of aging, he thought: how scattered and incoherent it all is. Aging is so chaotic, so Hydra-like. No wonder the world despairs of a cure. So many monstrous jaws agape, so many terrors gnas.h.i.+ng their teeth at us all at once. And each gerontologist fights one set of jaws and ignores the rest.
Aubrey went to sleep in his hotel room feeling exasperated. Because of his frustration and his jetlag, he woke up after only a few hours. It was four o'clock in the morning-or noon, back home in England. Aubrey remembers sitting up in bed, tugging at his beard, and seething about the day. Suddenly a thought came to him: Why not just clean up all all of the junk? If aging has no program, no plan, if we just fall apart in slow random motion, then there's always going to be chaos in each body's decline and fall. The evolutionary theory of aging predicts chaos. And chaos is just what you see at the cellular and molecular level, and what you will always see. But what these troubles all have in common is that they fill the aging body with junk. Maybe we can just clean up all the scree and rubble that gathers in our aging bodies. That is what came to him in the hotel room in California at four in the morning. of the junk? If aging has no program, no plan, if we just fall apart in slow random motion, then there's always going to be chaos in each body's decline and fall. The evolutionary theory of aging predicts chaos. And chaos is just what you see at the cellular and molecular level, and what you will always see. But what these troubles all have in common is that they fill the aging body with junk. Maybe we can just clean up all the scree and rubble that gathers in our aging bodies. That is what came to him in the hotel room in California at four in the morning.
Aubrey told me all this a few years later. He was pa.s.sing through the United States on a lecture tour in 2002, and I invited him to stop by for a day or two to explain what he was about. It was our first meeting. I picked him up at the airport in Philadelphia and as he huddled in the death seat of my car, enduring the curves of our country roads (we were winding our way toward my house in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where I lived at the time), the poor man's face looked pale to the roots of his hair and beard, corpse-gray in the cheeks. His head tilted toward the window as if toward martyrdom. He'd never learned to drive, he told me, when I asked him if he was all right. He couldn't help feeling frightened in cars. That's how everyone will feel, he said, when they realize that they may have hundreds or even thousands of years ahead of them. Once that truth sinks in, it will be hard to find anyone on Earth who is willing to ride in an automobile, much less a police car or a fire truck. Too much life ahead. Too much time to lose.
We stopped at a country tavern, the Pineville, and Aubrey relaxed with a beer or two. Once we were settled in my study and Aubrey was relaxing with another beer, I asked him about metabolism. To have any chance at engineering longer lives, didn't we have to understand the intricacies of metabolism-all the ins and outs of our building up and our tearing down, all the invisible labors of the Phoenix, for which we burn away each day at 98.6 degrees?
Aubrey explained the thesis he'd been developing for the past few years. "We don't have to understand metabolism, because we don't have to clean up metabolism," he told me, triumphantly. "All we have to clean up is the detritus that metabolism lays down. And the critical point is, the detritus is not complicated at all. There are only seven types of detritus, more or less. This is the key insight that underpins everything I say. It hasn't been thought about by gerontologists. They're scientists, not engineers."
I had spent enough time in pathology labs, staring through microscopes at damaged tissues that reeked of formaldehyde, to know that our mortal detritus is incredibly complicated. But I'd promised to listen with an open mind.
Aubrey asked me to recall the theory of the disposable soma. After the age of reproduction, the whole body is disposable; so the garbage piles up. It is all very simply a problem of garbage disposal. Our bodies were not designed to last as long as we would like them to last. So why not keep them in good repair, as you would keep a treasured antique car in repair, sc.r.a.ping away the rust, replacing broken parts, and so on? We maintain our houses, too. If we want them to stay leakproof we have to caulk the sills, replace the roof every ten years. We have to repaint. We have to replant, reseed the gardens, clean the gutters, repoint the bricks with fresh mortar. It's a lot of work, of course, but there's nothing very mysterious or surprising about it. If we do all that and keep after it, the house will last a long time. So why not do the same thing for our bodies?
The beauty of this view of aging, Aubrey said, the beauty of the disposable soma, and the garbage catastrophe, is that curing aging requires no great knowledge of design. You don't have to be able to design a car in order to maintain a car, or to build a house to maintain it, either. "Most people want to clean up metabolism-and metabolism is so crazily complicated. It won't happen," he says. "It'll be decades before we understand the cell like a nuclear power station. So my radical idea is, don't try to prevent damage. Let it take place." And just keep cleaning up after ourselves-keep clearing away the nuclear debris. Although metabolism is complicated, the nasty by-products are not. It's like the difference between a car and the rust and gunk in the engine. The mess may be hard to clean, but cleaning it out is a lot simpler than designing and building a new engine. Rust and gunk have no working parts. They just sit there and get in the way, he said.
Aubrey laid out this argument that day with prodigious intensity, leaning or half-lunging out of my office chair, bottle in hand, the beard pooling in his lap. Behind him stood my wall of books about biology. By this time I had quite a collection, after two decades of following the science of life, a long tall wall that ran the length of the room. I enjoyed Aubrey's enthusiasm and I thought he was a great character, but I wasn't hearing the kind of trumpet blast that would bring that wall of books tumbling down. Probably I was giving Aubrey the hairy eyeball now and then as I listened to him; but he was used to that, and that's why he talked like an overeager salesman. With his larger-than-life beard and intensity he reminded me of a prisoner in a cell in an old New Yorker New Yorker cartoon. Two men hang chained to opposite walls of a medieval dungeon. Nothing in the cell but tall stone walls, one tiny thick-barred window. Each wretch is chained about ten feet up on the wall, spread-eagled by shackles on both wrists and both ankles, each man with a beard of years hanging down past his waist. And the first prisoner is saying to the other, "Now, here's my plan..." cartoon. Two men hang chained to opposite walls of a medieval dungeon. Nothing in the cell but tall stone walls, one tiny thick-barred window. Each wretch is chained about ten feet up on the wall, spread-eagled by shackles on both wrists and both ankles, each man with a beard of years hanging down past his waist. And the first prisoner is saying to the other, "Now, here's my plan..."
With that kind of confidence, which struck me as slightly ludicrous, in the face of our mortal situation, Aubrey told me the story he has told a thousand times since: how sitting in his hotel room in the small hours that night, he made a list of the kinds of junk that builds up and what we might do to clear it away. When he was finished with his list he was greatly encouraged to see that it was short. Once you think of our body's decline in terms of clearing away just a few types of damage, you've demystified the problem of the ages. You've reduced the greatest prisoner's dilemma of human experience to nothing more than a list of puzzles. With our big brains, we are wonderful at solving puzzles and brain-teasers. There's nothing that a little can-do spirit can't do if we all pull together. I listened to Aubrey and I thought: There it is again, the voice of immortalists down through the ages. It was the same ageless voice I first heard in the Reading Room of the great public library on Fifth Avenue, up the flight of stone stairs between the lions Patience and Fort.i.tude, when I met Ko Hung, Roger Bacon, and Paracelsus (born Theophrastus Phillippus Aureolus Bombastus von Hohenheim).
The list had changed a bit over time. He'd started out with nine deadly things, in his first paper on the subject. Since then he'd been adding and subtracting, lumping and splitting, until he had seven. All seven are well known, even notorious. In fact, Aubrey's seven deadly things are to gerontologists what the seven deadly sins are to doctors of the soul. Here is one deadly thing: many of our molecules grow tangled and stiff with age; they get stuck together in more and more places, as if demons were das.h.i.+ng through our bodies daily with molecular staple guns. Biochemists call those staples cross-links. Here is a second deadly thing: the cells' mitochondria fail with age. A third: junk collects inside our cells. A fourth: more junk collects in the s.p.a.ces between our cells. A fifth: some of our cells get old and hang around in the body without doing their jobs-making a nuisance of themselves. A sixth: some cells die and poison the cells around them. And here is a seventh deadly thing. The very worst citizens among our cells acc.u.mulate dangerous mutations in the genes of the nucleus. Those cells' descendants build tumors.
Aubrey explained that if we approach these seven deadly things methodically, the conquest of aging might turn out to be a very simple matter, at bottom. Start with the most basic kind of damage, the cross-links that stiffen our collagen and make our skin wrinkle those dismal things that chemists call the advanced glycation endproducts, the AGEs. These cross-links are nothing but junk that the body has not learned to get rid of. So, said Aubrey, all we have to do is break the cross-links. We can repair the damage of the AGEs. Chemists already know what they're made of. Chemically, they are sugars. All we need is a solvent that can snap off those extra sugars without breaking or fraying the ropes. In other words, we need a solvent that is very highly selective. It has to be selective because most of our proteins, most of our molecular machines, contain cross-links made of sugars. They're not confined to old ropes of collagen. They're everywhere. We want a compound that breaks only the cross-links that have formed by accident without breaking all of the other cross-linked machinery that we need to stay alive. In the ideal situation, said Aubrey, the particular links we need to break would turn out to be the ones that are easiest to break; whereas the links we want to preserve would be harder to break; and with just the right set of chemicals and solvents we will be able to snip the feeble cross-links as fast as they form.
Researchers in big pharma are already at work on this kind of problem. After all, the first antiwrinkling cream that actually erases wrinkles will be worth more money than v.i.a.g.r.a. Almost every human hide gets less elastic with age, a condition known as elastosis. Aubrey told me about a chemical that was being promoted at the time by a small biotech called Alteon. Alteon's chemical of interest was purported to break one particular cla.s.s of cross-links, called dicarbonyl linkages. The interesting thing about the drug was that it was supposed to work catalytically. That is, it broke one cross-link and then was released in its original form to break another.
I followed Aubrey's rap about AGEs with the same polite interest and skepticism that I would have shown a sales rep from Alteon. It's not a bad idea to try to prevent or fix those cross-links. That's a perfectly reasonable goal for medical researchers to work on, since cross-links do so much damage to our aging bodies, inside and out. And, as Aubrey was saying, many researchers have been working on it for years. In fact, I recognized one of them when Aubrey mentioned his name. I'd met him back in the early 1980s, at about the time I met Maria Rudzinska. He was already working on the cross-links problem back then. It was interesting to hear that his ideas were finally being put to the test by a biotech company. I made a mental note: that might be worth checking out. But the specificity problem isn't something to brush away lightly, with wrinkle treatments or anything else. The specificity problem is basic to medicine and always will be. If specificity weren't a problem, you could cure any headache on Earth with a simple surgical tool called a sledgehammer. That procedure would work, but it would have side-effects. If specificity weren't a problem, the historical model for Doctor Faustus wouldn't have gone to jail; his facial-hair remover wouldn't have taken off the patient's face along with the hair. In medicine, you might almost say, specificity is is the problem. Without it, you've got no one left at the end of the day to pay your fee. "Cure the disease and kill the patient," as Francis Bacon was the first to say. Medicines used to be called "specifics." the problem. Without it, you've got no one left at the end of the day to pay your fee. "Cure the disease and kill the patient," as Francis Bacon was the first to say. Medicines used to be called "specifics."
Cross-links are one of the simpler items on Aubrey's list of Seven Deadly Things. But as Aubrey laid them out for me, I thought some of his proposals did sound surprising and clever. He told me about his own special interest, the aging of our cells' factories, the mitochondria. He reminded me that because of the low-grade chemical fires that burn day and night in the mitochondria, sparks are always flying around (metaphorically speaking), and some of those sparks singe the mitochondrial DNA. The ancient slaves inside our cells give us our energy, but they burn themselves in the fires of their own furnaces. That damage, the corruption of our mitochondrial DNA, is the second of Aubrey's Seven Deadly Things.
Aubrey told me that he had thought of a way to deal with that damage. The DNA in the nucleus of each human cell contains about twenty thousand genes. But the DNA in our mitochondria is much simpler. It contains only thirty-seven genes and encodes only thirteen proteins.
People who are born with mutations in those thirteen mitochondrial genes are in serious trouble. Because the work of the mitochondria is vital, mutations there can cause rare and horrible diseases of the brain, the heart, the muscles, the liver, the kidneys.
Those precious thirteen are in the hot zone. The DNA that encodes them is subject to as much as one hundred times more cooking than the DNA that is ensconced in relative safety in the nucleus, farther away from the furnaces. If only those thirteen genes were inside the nucleus, they would be safer, Aubrey said. Then they would not be baking day and night in the fury of our molecular furnaces, the mitochondria. According to present theory, in fact, most of the mitochondrial genes have already made just that move. The ancestors of our mitochondria had about a thousand genes. All but those last thirteen genes have migrated to the nucleus.
"So the question is, why haven't these genes moved?" Aubrey asked.
That startled me. I'd never heard the question asked before, or thought to ask it. What Aubrey was describing is, in fact, a fairly common phenomenon: when two living things become closely intertwined, they move genes around to achieve the best, most optimum, fit. Biologists discovered a similar story recently with aphids and the bacteria in their guts. It's a little like the exchanges between cultures-when one tribe conquers and engulfs another (think jazz and blues in America). Gains and losses, as in a marriage. An article in the journal Science Science, describing the s.h.i.+fts of genes from the bacteria to their hosts, the aphids, summed it up neatly: "Any successful relations.h.i.+p demands sacrifices." So Aubrey's question was interesting. If the mitochondria have given up virtually all of their genes and s.h.i.+fted them to the relative safety of the nucleus, then why haven't they s.h.i.+fted the last thirteen?
"There are lots of ideas," said Aubrey. "All but one is complete piffle. The reason is hydrophobicity." For complicated reasons, some of the cell's machinery has to be so constructed that it is hydrophobic: that is, so that its molecules do not like contact with water. The word "hydrophobic" means, literally, afraid of water. And this question of hydrophobicity is vital throughout the cell because most of the fluid inside there, the cytosol, is water. All of the molecular machines that float, swim, hammer, and saw inside the cell have to work underwater. If they are hydrophobic, afraid of water, they may clump and ball up so tightly that they are unable to function. It's the difference between, on the one hand, dropping spaghetti noodles into a pot of boiling water and, on the other hand, pouring in a splash of olive oil. The noodles will swirl around in the water, as long as you stir them once in a while, because pasta is not hydrophobic. But no matter how much you stir, the oil will just clump on the surface, because it is.
Aubrey took a swig from his beer bottle and discovered that it was empty. He said, "Another good thing about drinking all the time is that I keep my voice."
I gave him a look. "Well, water water will do that, Aubrey." will do that, Aubrey."
Aubrey laughed his most charming and disarming laugh.
When he got back from my kitchen with another bottle of beer, he explained a bit more about hydrophobicity. Each and every one of the thirteen genes in the mitochondria encodes molecular machinery that is highly hydrophobic, he said. That may be why those thirteen genes never moved to the nucleus. So, he said, why don't we move them ourselves? We should do what evolution has failed to do and inject good copies of those thirteen genes into the nuclei of human cells, using the procedures of gene therapy.
Here I gave Aubrey another skeptical look. But he was prepared for it. Gene therapists are already able to inject genes into multicellular organisms like flies and mice, and they are growing more capable and sophisticated every year.
"Totally straightforward," Aubrey concluded. "With less than ten million dollars and within five years-or certainly ten years-I could make mice that did not have any mitochondrial DNA."
I asked him how long those genetically-engineered mice would be likely to live.
"No idea," Aubrey said. "If we did that and nothing else, it could be they'd live just a bit longer. But I don't care. It's a candidate mechanism, so let's fix it! If we can fix it, we should. If there's only seven things to fix, then we d.a.m.n well should. Let's not waste our time arguing that one or two of them might not matter."
That is one of the logical necessities of Aubrey's argument. You need to solve all seven problems at once if you want to extend our lives dramatically. Solving just one or two won't do the trick. We're looking at the sad, familiar truth that if one thing doesn't get you, then another thing will. If you don't get cancer you are likely to die of atherosclerosis. If you don't get atherosclerosis then you are likely to die of Alzheimer's. And so on. To extend human lives indefinitely, to engineer our bodies into a state of perpetual health, we would have to dodge every single one of those diseases, the late-onset diseases. We'd have to figure out how to cure them all or prevent them all, or at least to postpone their onset indefinitely. We'd have to cauterize every head of the Hydra. William James makes this point in another connection in "The Sick Soul," a chapter in The Varieties of Religious Experience The Varieties of Religious Experience. "A chain is no stronger than its weakest link," he writes, "and life is after all a chain." In that same chapter, James calls death "the worm at the core" of all human happiness. "Let sanguine healthy-mindedness do its best with its strange power of living in the moment and ignoring and forgetting, still the evil background is really there to be thought of, and the skull will grin in at the banquet."