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Scientists Have Mathematical Proof That It's Impossible To Stop Aging (sciencealert.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Science Alert: Mathematically speaking, multicellular organisms like us will always have to deal with a cellular competition where only one side will win. And ultimately, that means our vitality will always come out as the loser. We have a pair of researchers from the University of Arizona to blame for this depressing conclusion, who crunched the numbers on a hypothesis involving the weeding out of unfit cells and found it amounted to a catch-22 situation. Aging -- and all of the biological changes that come with it -- is more or less the result of cells slowing down and losing their functions. But what if there was a way to encourage the more active cells to stick around at the expense of their sluggish siblings? Surely if we knocked off those old cells we could keep making pigments and collagen a little longer. Researchers have pinned hopes on reversing the inevitable decay of biochemistry by repairing DNA or extending the shrinking bits of chromosome called telomeres, for example. While it's good in theory, there is a catch. Another feature of aging is a number of cells start to populate like there's no tomorrow, reproducing in uncontrolled ways that look too close to cancer for comfort. According to the researchers, this means we're damned either way.

The way we grow old poses something of a mystery. If replicating biology is good enough to continue for generations, why do our own cells wind down after just a few decades? A simple answer is evolution isn't strong enough to weed out genes that only cause us grief after we've popped out a few offspring. But this model of aging adds a new element to the existing hypothesis -- even if evolution did select for eternal youth, competition inside our own bodies would see us to an inevitable grave. In other words, since multicellular organisms are the cumulative effect of bunches of cooperating cells, we logically can't have it both ways -- if you clear the way for 'younger' cells to keep your skin baby-smooth, you're just asking for the big C.
The findings have been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

28 of 177 comments (clear)

  1. Unbalanced Machine by Drethon · · Score: 2

    This just kind of sounds to me like a PID controller tuned for the short term that goes out of control in the long term. Probably just falsely applying what I know to something completely unrelated...

    1. Re:Unbalanced Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, it sounds like it, because they oversimplified the problem. One issue with engineering education is that in order to make problems solvable, they teach you to make a lot of assumptions to simplify the problem. It's a useful tool for making control systems on a small scale, but for more complex systems like biology(even single celled organisms), politics, economics, weather, climate, psychology, it doesn't work. I think this disconnect leads to a lot of arrogance(I myself had to learn the hard way) about what we have the ability to control or even predict. I think this arrogance, the over simplification of complexity, is largely why engineers tend to be the most likely candidates for terrorism. They have immense power to understand and control simply systems, so why not big complex systems too? https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2015/11/17/this-is-the-group-thats-surprisingly-prone-to-violent-extremism/

    2. Re: Unbalanced Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes correct. Moreover they have misunderstood their own math. It doesn't say that aging cannot be repaired. It said that evolution cannot do it. There is no organism that lays spare parts in cold storage and then swaps them out when parts wear out. We however could eventually make spare parts.

    3. Re:Unbalanced Machine by kelemvor4 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sure, it sounds like it, because they oversimplified the problem. One issue with engineering education is that in order to make problems solvable, they teach you to make a lot of assumptions to simplify the problem. It's a useful tool for making control systems on a small scale, but for more complex systems like biology(even single celled organisms), politics, economics, weather, climate, psychology, it doesn't work. I think this disconnect leads to a lot of arrogance(I myself had to learn the hard way) about what we have the ability to control or even predict. I think this arrogance, the over simplification of complexity, is largely why engineers tend to be the most likely candidates for terrorism. They have immense power to understand and control simply systems, so why not big complex systems too? https://www.washingtonpost.com...

      Sort of. The article starts by talking about terrorists, but when they get into talking about engineers specifically they shift to talking about "leaders of extreme right-wing groups".

      In other words, that article is political propaganda that we've become accustomed to seeing from the Washington post or in Slashdot terms: "nothing to see here,move along."

  2. Sigh, no they didn't by JoshuaZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ok. I'm a mathematician, so I think I have some degree of expertise relevant to comment when someone says that they have a mathematical proof of something. You cannot give a mathematical proof of something in the physical world. At most, you can give a mathematical proof that something is true in some model of the physical world. Your model may or may not match expectations. This occurs all the time; there are all sorts of proofs of security in cryptography (generally assuming certain computational complexity assumptions) and yet the crypto systems are frequently broken by using clever side-channel attacks or other clever tricks that couldn't be done in the context of the model of computation being used. In this case the fact that some other species can live much longer than humans is by itself a pretty big sign that the model is by far from a perfect one. And from glancing at the article in question, it looks like the scientists actually didn't claim nearly as big a deal as the summary suggests.

    1. Re:Sigh, no they didn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Even if aging cannot be stopped that does not mean it can never be dealt with. Some creatures have a solution that works for them.

    2. Re:Sigh, no they didn't by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ok. I'm a mathematician, so I think I have some degree of expertise relevant to comment when someone says that they have a mathematical proof of something. You cannot give a mathematical proof of something in the physical world.

      You are of course correct. I think they are using the wrong words "mathematical proof" when the accurate term is "extensive modelling."

      But that's the world we live in, where Mathematical proof sounds so smart and right, and extensive modelling probably sounds like women and men walking around on catwalks to show off clothing.

      The abstract :http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2017/10/25/1618854114

      The full text http://www.pnas.org/content/ea...

      A really quick perusal of the full paper doesn't show any particular issues, it is simply a model run to some conclusion. As always, some assumptions have to be made. As such, there is nothing outlandish or red flagging about it.

      I think the tl;dr version of all this is don't put a lot of stock in articles that try to bridge popular culture and science - read the actual papers.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    3. Re:Sigh, no they didn't by OneHundredAndTen · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And from glancing at the article in question, it looks like the scientists actually didn't claim nearly as big a deal as the summary suggests.

      Unfortunately, that is par for the course for the mainstream press, which lives on hyperbole, distortion and exaggeration. In fact, it is not too far-fetched to assert that the mainstream has been, for a long time now, moving from the news report business to the entertainment business.

    4. Re:Sigh, no they didn't by the_skywise · · Score: 2

      I have no argument that the model is "correct" but that's like saying I made a mathematical proof that I'll go bankrupt if I keep spending $500 a month but only earn $400 and it's an inevitable conclusion that I'm doomed and then patting myself on the back for how clever I am. (Hint: not much if I'm spending more than I earn!)

      I don't even need a mathematical proof to say that extending life is difficult as there's plenty of evidence with man-made objects which are 100% controllable machines and can be rebuilt-repaired indefinitely but eventually it always becomes a lost cause.

      No system is a perpetual motion machine nor can it ever be a perpetual motion machine by the very laws of physics!
      But that won't stop us from trying!

    5. Re:Sigh, no they didn't by Jamu · · Score: 5, Funny

      Living and aging are the same thing. Obviously aging can be stopped.

      --
      Who ordered that?
    6. Re:Sigh, no they didn't by avandesande · · Score: 2

      There is a stand of aspen in Utah they estimate at 80,000 years....
      https://www.treehugger.com/nat...

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
  3. False Dichotomy by ScentCone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So it's either aging or cancer? I don't buy it. Someone in their teens isn't aging (in way we're all talking about it), quite the opposite. But neither is their rapid renewal of useful stuff like cartilage, collagen, etc., blowing up as cancer for all of them. This mathematical proof that you can't have it both ways is based on a premise of there only being two ways. Something as complicated as a mammal body never operates in a one-way-or-another set of only two possibilities. We're the sum of many, many processes. There's room to tweak the nature and damage of aging skin, joints, brains, and hearts and thus mitigate some of the hardships of aging without assuming that it's only successful if we become beautiful young immortals.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    1. Re:False Dichotomy by quintus_horatius · · Score: 2

      You were once the youngest organism on the planet. But at the same time you’re also as old as life itself, an unbroken line of cell divisions stretching back 3.5 billion years.

      Yes, it's a false dichotomy. We're programmed to grow old and die. Mice and Humboldt Squid live about the same amount of time, about two years. Humans, whales, and macaws live about the same amount of time, around a century. Your lifespan is neither determined by the size of your body or the speed at which you live. We all seem to age in the same ways - young and fresh, then adult, then old and frail.

      Your cellular lineage is ancient, so it's not something intrinsic to the matter making up the cells. What's left but the instructions encoded in the genes?

  4. Math is sometime incorrect by Pablopelos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I remember for years the phrase was "mathematically a bumblebee can't fly". I hardly think we know all the nuances of cellular mechanics yet.

    1. Re:Math is sometime incorrect by Shotgun · · Score: 3, Funny

      The Burt's Bees do.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  5. Bladerunner dialog by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2

    I always liked this bit of dialogue. It'd be more scientifically accurate if Batty had suggested telomerase and Tyrell had warned it would cause cancer. Or if Batty suggested stem cells and Tyrell mentioned teratomas. Still you can sort of live with that. What was interesting was that you get the impression that the four year lifespan isn't artificial crippling as is suggested earlier but it was the best Tyrell Corp could do. Or maybe Tyrell was bullshitting. Blade Runner being Blade Runner, either interpretation is possible.

    https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/...

    Roy: Had in mind something a little more radical.
    Tyrell: What..? What seems to be the problem?
    Roy: Death.
    Tyrell: Death. Well, I'm afraid that's a little out of my jurisdiction, you...
    Roy: I want more life, fucker (father).
    Tyrell: The facts of life: To make an alteration in the evolvement of an organic life system is fatal. A coding sequence cannot be revised once it's been established.
    Roy: Why not?
    Tyrell: Because by the second day of incubation, any cells that have undergone reversion mutations give rise to revertant colonies like rats leaving a sinking ship; then the ship sinks.
    Roy: What about EMS recombination?
    Tyrell: We've already tried it. Ethyl methane sulfonate is an alkylating agent and a potent mutagen. It created a virus so lethal the subject was dead before he left the table.
    Roy: Then a repressor protein that blocks the operating cells.
    Tyrell: Wouldn't obstruct replication, but it does give rise to an error in replication so that the newly formed DNA strand carries a mutation and you've got a virus again. But this - all of this is academic. You were made as well as we could make you.
    Roy: But not to last.
    Tyrell: The light that burns twice as bright burns half as long, and you have burned so very very brightly, Roy. Look at you. You're the prodigal son. You're quite a prize!
    Roy: I've done questionable things.
    Tyrell: Also extraordinary things. Revel in your time!
    Roy: Nothing the god of biomechanics wouldn't let you in heaven for. [kisses Tyrell and kills him]
    Roy: [to J. F. Sebastian] Sorry, Sebastian. [Sebastian panics] Come. Come.

    --
    echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  6. How To Look Stupid by Inviska · · Score: 5, Informative

    Making an absolute claim like this is always a great way to make yourself look stupid. I remember at university chips were currently being fabricated using a 24micron process and a lecturer claimed it would be impossible to go below 8microns (I may be getting the numbers wrong here) because it was below the physical wavelength of light. Nearly two decades later, here we are at 10nm with further process shrinkages planned.

    You could have claimed it was mathematically impossible to reduce the fabrication process further due to the wavelength of light, but that doesn't mean there aren't ways around problems. To claim something is impossible simply because you don't know the solution is a great way to make yourself look stupid in the future.

    1. Re:How To Look Stupid by apoc.famine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Making an absolute claim like this is always a great way to make yourself look stupid.

      Which is why you only find this claim in the shit journalism that's trying to pander to a mainstream audience and not in the paper itself. I really wish I had millions of dollars, because I'd buy /., hire some competent people, and go right to the actual research rater than the sensational, misleading bullshit that is used to get ad-views.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
  7. Bye bye, Jellyfish by null+etc. · · Score: 4, Funny

    I guess immortal jellyfish will need to start dying off now, to satisfy this mathematician's proof.

    1. Re:Bye bye, Jellyfish by flink · · Score: 2

      They do it by reverting to an embryonic state.

      I guess if you don't mind being liquefied and having your cells induced to revert to stem cells and then growing a new clone human from there, you could consider yourself "immortal".

  8. Proven wrong by gchat · · Score: 2

    Well I guess nature has already proven them wrong:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    TLDR:
    Turritopsis dohrnii, the immortal jellyfish, is a species of small, biologically immortal jellyfish found in the Mediterranean Sea and in the waters of Japan...
    It does this through the cell development process of transdifferentiation, which alters the differentiated state of the cells and transforms them into new types of cells.

  9. Counterexample by jgullstr · · Score: 2

    The immortal jellyfish begs to differ.

  10. This is a very limited result by Baron_Yam · · Score: 4, Informative

    They've shown mathematical proof that one particular concept for defeating the symptoms of aging won't work.

    Obviously, no matter what you do eventually entropy wins... but there's no law of physics of which I'm aware that shows you can't re-engineer biology from scratch to make it much more entropy-resistant.

    It's just really, really, really difficult. However, we already have examples of organisms that are highly cancer resistant, and others that live extremely long lives compared to ours, so we know even without a fundamental re-engineering there's a lot of room for improvement just copying what already exists in nature.

  11. Impossible is a big word by CptLoRes · · Score: 2

    Proving that the current favorite method for trying to stop ageing is infeasible, is not the same as saying stopping aging is impossible. Human flight was impossible Wright up until the moment it was not (phun intended).

  12. Not even close to accurate by TimothyHollins · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is why we don't invite mathematicians to parties.

    These guys have absolutely no clue what the hell they're on about. They start out grossly misunderstanding how aging works and what its role in biology is, then go on to grossly misunderstand how cancer is generated. Then they grossly misunderstand how replication works, followed by grossly misunderstanding evolution (strong enough? Who at a university+ level would say something like that?).

    Any freshman biologist can answer all these questions easily.

    Aging is the result of a) your body adapting to its current needs (growing, reproduction etc) and b) your genetic material accumulating errors from the replication used to build new cells. This is not a theory, this is not "controversial", this has been the settled conclusion for a long time. If the mathematicians at Arizona can't pick up a textbook...

    The carcinogenesis process is also well understood (though there are many details, such as the newfound roles of both micro- and lnc- RNA, that are still a mystery).
    There are X number of established ways, all involving knocking out tumor-preventing pathways or hyper-activating growth pathways. It is not a result of aging, but of the previously mentioned genetic errors that come with replication + plus external factors that may play some role (infection with HR-HPV is considered a requirement for cervical cancer, and plays a major role in some other cancers including penile, vulvar, anal, head, and neck). If it were a result of aging, or if cells got "hyper-competitive" later down the road, we wouldn't see kids with leukemia, nor teenagers with melanoma (from tanning all day long, something that causes massive buildup of genetic errors in the skin cells).

    Our cells never actually wind down. They do the best they can with the resources they are given. As our machinery accrues more and more faults over the years, the functionality deteriorates. Just like an 8 year old computer will have some problems and some 'ticks', so too will cells based on old DNA. But there is no in-built wind-down parameter, there is no "give-up and die" gene.
    At most we have something called telomeres attached to our chromosomes that tells us how many times the chromosome has been replicated, giving an indicator of how "reliable" the chromosome DNA is. Extending the telomeres leads them to be used for longer. This allows more errors to accrue in the chromosome, which increases the risk of a cancer blocking pathway on the chromosome to be knocked out. Hence, if you want to live forever, you have to both extend the telomere as well as prevent replication errors.

    And to answer the final (ridiculous) assertion -

    But this model of aging adds a new element to the existing hypothesis -- even if evolution did select for eternal youth, competition inside our own bodies would see us to an inevitable grave. /quote

    There is only "competition" inside the body when something has already gone horribly wrong. There are more than 10 "anti-compete clause" pathways active in each cell. If a cell "competes", it will receive an apoptosis signal to commit suicide, and it will be destroyed by the body's own immune system. It is only when these anti-compete pathways have been destroyed already that any classic evolution-based competition can occur.

    In short, these guys really should have asked a biologist before spouting nonsense.

  13. Re:Who wants to live forever anyway? by millertym · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I get what you are saying, but to think like that in absolute terms is to ignore the billions of positive selfless acts that also happen each day among humanity.

    Our civilization could not exist in the complex way it does without MOST members of the race USUALLY behaving in ways that involve friendship, love, kindness, and selflessness.

    We all have a selfish animal side existing inside of us. But we also have the thinking side that has allowed humanity as a whole to continue on despite the animal side.

    I believe the next 100 years will be absolute critical on if our path as a race leads us as a race toward extinction or some kind of 'beyond physical body' immortality.

  14. the myth that theoretically bumblebees can't fly by XXongo · · Score: 3, Informative

    I remember for years the phrase was "mathematically a bumblebee can't fly".

    Well, that myth that theoretically a bumble bee can't fly is mostly a myth, you know.

    Here's a longer explanation of where the myth comes from: http://www.abc.net.au/science/...

  15. Re:This is a good thing by Script+Cat · · Score: 2

    This is why we have term limits.