London - A pill that alleviates the worst aspects of ageing could be closer than we think, an expert says.
In fact, a drug already licensed to treat cancer is getting the results scientists are after, in animals.
Professor Dame Linda Partridge, the director of the Institute of Ageing at University College London, said that when mice were fed the drug rapamycin, they lived longer, the Age reported.
But the drug also offered protection against neurodegenerative diseases, which are closely linked to ageing.
"Ageing is the main risk factor for all these horrible killer and chronic conditions — dementia, cardiovascular disease, cancer," Professor Partridge said.
"What we are trying to do here is hit the underlying ageing process itself through understanding mechanisms to protect against all these things at once, rather than treating them piecemeal.
"Rapamycin is beginning to look like a proof of principle that that kind of approach is going to work."
However, the drug — a natural product initially discovered in the soil of Easter Island — is also believed to have a downside.
It's an immune suppressant and is also used to prevent the body rejecting an organ after transplant.
But there's potential to boost the drug's health benefits while minimising its undesirable side-effects, Professor Partridge said.
Professor Partridge will deliver the 2012 Graeme Clark Oration in Melbourne tomorrow.
| Other Articles: |
 |
Soon, Facebook to display ads based on your whereabouts (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Why Olympic athletes throw up their arms after win (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Microsoft unveils new Office 2013 consumer preview (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Sunita Williams arrives at her new home in space (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Yahoo fixes security glitch that allowed hackers access 450,000 email, passwords (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Gold nanoparticles could help treat prostate cancer with fewer side effects (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
US hypersonic plane to fly at 20 times speed of sound (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Engineering tech sheds new light on eating habits of giant dinosaurs (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Lab-engineered muscle implants restore function in mice (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Genetically engineered bacteria `kills malaria parasite` (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Higher levels of vitamin C could help cut heart disease, stroke and cancer (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Second member of rare breed of dead spinning star found (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Nail polishes may increase diabetes risk in women (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Troubled Yahoo appoints Google’s Marissa Mayer as new CEO (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Indian entrepreneur launches multilingual 'talking Koran' (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Largest ancient dam built by Maya in Central America uncovered (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Why last 7 mins of Curiosity landing are most challenging for NASA (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Cord blood cells may prove valuable for treatment of neurological diseases (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Anonymous plans to set up ‘WikiLeaks-style’ website (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Facebook page can reveal your personality (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
GM mosquitoes will soon be unleashed in India to fight dengue fever (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Steve Jobs was 'petulant, brittle, mean': Biographer (17th Jul, 2012) |
 |
We could have close encounter with aliens this century, says physicist (16th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Most commonly used passwords of hacked accounts revealed (16th Jul, 2012) |
 |
Facebook `creating generation of gambling addicts` (16th Jul, 2012) |