Reengineering Life

A New Kind of Gene Editing Could Turn Back the Clock on a Rapid Aging Disease

Research in mice shows promise for treating progeria, a disease that causes rapid aging and early death

Emily Mullin
Future Human
Published in
5 min readJan 12, 2021

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Twenty-year-old Michiel Vandeweert was born with progeria, an extremely rare aging condition. Belgium, December 1, 2018. Photo illustration source: Barcroft Media/Getty Images

Reengineering Life is a column from Future Human about the ways humans are using biology to reprogram our bodies and the world around us.

Children who are born with a rare genetic disease called progeria tragically live, on average, only until their mid-teens, though they look much older. Their bodies age so rapidly — up to 10 times faster than normal — that they usually die prematurely from heart attacks or strokes before they can finish high school. The culprit is a single-letter misspelling in their DNA.

Now, scientists have successfully corrected this misspelling in mice that have the disease by using a new kind of gene editing called base editing, raising hopes that a cure for children with progeria may be possible. The results were published on January 6 in the journal Nature.

“It’s quite a remarkable finding,” Robert Goldman, PhD, a professor of cell and developmental biology at Northwestern University who was not involved in the study, tells Future Human. “They saw a really substantial correction of…

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Future Human
Future Human

Published in Future Human

Future Human was science publication from Medium about the survival of our species. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Emily Mullin
Emily Mullin

Written by Emily Mullin

Former staff writer at Medium, where I covered biotech, genetics, and Covid-19 for OneZero, Future Human, Elemental, and the Coronavirus Blog.

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