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Subject:
From:
Tad Glines <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Paleolithic Eating Support List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 13 Apr 2004 09:01:40 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
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Found this article linked on Slashdot (a geek news site). Thought the list
might find it interesting.

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(04-12) 15:44 PDT ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -- 

A dwarf mouse named Yoda has celebrated his fourth birthday, making him the
oldest of his kind and far beyond 100 in human years, the University of
Michigan Medical School says. 

Yoda owes his longevity to genetic modifications that affected his pituitary
and thyroid glands and reduced insulin production -- and which left him a
third smaller than an average mouse and very sensitive to cold. 

On the other hand, at the human equivalent of about 136 years, Yoda is still
mobile, sexually active and "looking good," said Dr. Richard A. Miller,
associate director of research at the school's geriatrics center. 

Yoda lives in a carefully maintained lab with roughly 100 other male
geriatric mice being used for a lifespan study. An average lab mouse lives
slightly more than two years. 

Yoda's cage mate, Princess Leia, is a much larger female who uses her body
warmth to keep the dwarf mouse from freezing to death. 

Researchers are studying the genetic mutants to determine how altered
hormone levels can slow the aging process, with the hope of figuring out
which methods, if any, eventually could be applied to humans. 

University of Michigan Medical School: www.med.umich.edu/medschool 

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