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by thewebcount
1326 days ago
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I asked a doctor about this once. He said that as any animal ages, the protective mechanisms they have eventually break down, and either work less well or stop working. In dogs, they break down sooner than in humans. For example, the ends of chromosomes have telomeres[0]. When chromosomes are copied they can’t copy the full length of the chromosome, so every copy has fewer of these telomeres. When they eventually run out of telomeres, cell division stops happening. (I don’t know whether dog chromosomes have fewer telomeres or if it’s some other mechanism, but telomeres are an example of a cellular mechanism that has a limited lifetime.) [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telomere |
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So... we can create pristine new life with biological clock reset at 0, but not do so for our own bodies.