Good Mutations and Breathing
Stem cells — the factories that manufacture all our component body parts — may hold a key to divining why our bodies gradually break down as we age. A new body of research shows how the body’s population of blood stem cells mutates, and gradually dies, over a typical lifespan. Sometimes these mutations turn cancerous, sometimes not. Luckily for us, the research is centered on the blood samples of Hendrikje van Andel-Schipper — she died in 2005 at the age of 115, and donated her body to science. Her body showed a remarkable resilience — no hardening of the arteries and no deterioration of her brain tissue. When quizzed about the secret of her longevity, she once retorted, “breathing”. From the New Scientist: Death is the one certainty in life…