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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Declined mortality in industrialised societies
- Maximum human longevity
- Population projections for the UK
- Some common age-related pathologies
- Yoda and his companion Princess Leia
- Non-aging and slow-aging organisms
- Maximum life spans: chimpanzee vs. human
- The force of natural selection declines with age
- The mutation-accumulation theory
- The pleiotropy or trade-off theory
- Evolutionary theories of ageing
- Aging in animals protected from extrinsic hazard
- Social insects and mammals
- Evolutionary aspect of aging - conclusions
- Main laboratory experimental organisms
- Using Drosophila in studying aging theories
- Tests of the mutation-accumulation theory
- Testing the trade-off theory experimentally
- Experimental results: 'young' vs. 'old' line females
- Testing the trade-off theory in birds and mammals
- Aging rate in birds vs. mammals
- Brandt's bat
- Adult survival in relation to body weight
- Adult survival in relation to number of offspring
- Conclusion experimental/comparative analysis
- Interventions that slow ageing in diverse organisms
- Mutation causing C. elegans to live long
- Insulin\IGF-like pathway and lifespan: C. elegans
- Insulin\IGF-like signalling pathway: Drosophila
- Null mutation of the fly insulin receptor substrate
- Insulin-like signalling in Drosophila and C. elegans
- Extensions of lifespan by altered IIS in Drosophila
- Genetic effects on lifespan in mice
- Life span extending mutations and fecundity
- Dietary restriction (DR) and extended lifespan
- Lifespan extension by DR affects fecundity
- Conclusions
- Acknowledgment
Topics Covered
- Declined mortality in industrialized societies
- Maximum human longevity
- Werner's syndrome
- Common age-related pathologies
- The force of natural selection declines with age
- Mutationaccumulation theory
- The pleiotropy or trade-off theory
- Evolutionary theories of aging
- Aging in different organisms
- Testing the theories
- Interventions that slow aging in diverse organisms
- Insulin/IGF-like signaling
- Genetic effects on lifespan
- Extension of lifespan by dietary restriction
Talk Citation
Partridge, L. (2021, June 12). Aging and evolutionary medicine [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 3, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/DWMM4693.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Linda Partridge has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
A selection of talks on Clinical Practice
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
This talk is going
to be about ageing.
It's one of those
characteristics
where understanding
how it has evolved
is really key to thinking
about its mechanisms.
This is a case where
evolutionary biology really
is directly relevant
to a medical problem,
and there are some extremely
pressing reasons for
taking an interest
in ageing right now.
One of them is the
fairly obvious one,
that mortality rates have
shown a dramatic decline
in industrialised
societies worldwide.
This is a trend that started in
about the middle of the 19th century
and has continued unabated
to the present day.
0:43
This slide from the work of
Jim Vaupel and his colleagues
shows some examples of these.
These are mortality
rates for women
between the ages of 80 and 89,
between the years 1950 and 1995
in various industrialised
societies.
You can see that over
that time period,
there has been a more
or less linear decrease
in death rates.
They've more than halved
over that period of time.
This is a trend that
is continuing now.
What the demographers tell us
is that there's
absolutely no sign
that this decrease in mortality
rates is slowing down.
We cannot yet see what
any intrinsic limit to
human lifespan is
actually going to be.
There doesn't at
the moment seem to
be an approaching wall of death
at an age after which human
longevity is impossible.
The current world record holder
is an extremely
interesting person.