living to 120
THE LONGEVITY SEEKERS
reviewed by
SCOTT McLEMEE
______________________________
Scott
McLemee's reviews, essays and interviews have appeared in The
New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston
Globe, The Nation, Newsday, The Common
Review and numerous other publications including insidehighered.com,
where this article first appeared. For more of Scott, check
out his blog.
Standing
in line at the drugstore a couple of weeks ago, I spied on the
magazine rack nearby this month’s issue of National
Geographic – conspicuous as one of the few titles
without a celebrity on the cover. Instead it showed a photograph
of an infant beneath a headline saying "This Baby Will
Live to Be 120."
The
editors must have expected disbelief, because there was a footnote
to the headline insisting that the claim was not hype: "New
science could lead to very long lives." When was the last
time you saw a footnote in a popular periodical, on the cover,
no less? It seemed worth a look, particularly after the septuagenarian
in front of me had opened complex, in-depth negotiations with
the pharmacist.
The
headline, one learns from a comment on the table of contents,
alludes to a traditional Jewish birthday wish or blessing: "May
you live to be 120." This was the age that Moses was said
to have reached when he died. The same figure appears -- not
so coincidentally perhaps – at an important moment in
the book of Genesis. Before ending the Flood, Jehovah announces
that man’s lifespan will henceforth peak at 120 years.
(I take it there was a grandfather clause for Noah. When the
waters recede, he lives another 350 years).
The
cap on longevity, like the deluge itself, is ultimately mankind’s
own fault, given our tendency to impose too much on the Almighty’s
patience and good humour. He declares in about so many words
that there is a limit to how much He must endure from any single
one of us. Various translations make the point more or less
forcefully, but that’s the gist of it. Even 120 years
proved too generous an offer – one quietly retracted later,
it seems. Hence the Psalmist’s lament:
Nursing
homes are full of people who passed the fourscore marker a while
ago. If you visit such places very often, as I have lately,
“May you live to be 120” probably sounds more like
a curse than a blessing. Not even a funeral obliges more awareness
of mortal frailty. There is more to life than staving off death.
The prospect of being stranded somewhere in between for 30 or
40 years is enough to make an atheist believe in hell.
Meanwhile,
in science . . . The medical and biological research surveyed
in that NatGeo article promises to do more than drag
out the flesh’s “labour and sorrow” a lot
longer. The baby on the magazine cover will live his or her
allotted span of six score decades with an alert mind, in a
reasonably healthy body. Our genetic inheritance plays a huge
but not absolutely determinate role in how long we live. In
the wake of the mapping of genome, it could be possible to tinker
with the mechanisms that accelerate or delay the aging process.
It may not be the elixir of youth, but close enough.
Besides
treating the same research in greater depth, Ted Anton’s
The Longevity Seekers: Science, Business, and the Fountain
of Youth (University of Chicago Press) emphasizes how profound
a change longevity research has already wrought. It means no
longer taking for granted the status of aging as an inescapable,
biologically hardwired and fundamentally irreversible process
of general decline. Challenging the stereotypes and prejudices
about the elderly has been a difficult process, but longevity
engineering would transform the whole terrain of what aging
itself entails.
Anton,
a professor of English at DePaul University, tells the story
in two grand phases. The first bears some resemblance to James
Watson’s memoir The Double Helix, which recounts
the twists and turns of laboratory research in the struggle
to determine the structure of DNA – work for which he
and Francis Crick received a Nobel Prize in medicine in 1962.
Watson’s book is particularly memorable for revealing
science as an enterprise in which personalities and ambitions
clash as much as theories ever do. (And with far more rancour
as Watson himself demonstrated in the book’s vicious and
petty treatment of Rosalind Franklin, a crystallographer whose
contribution he downplayed as much as possible).
A practitioner
of long-form journalism rather than a longevity researcher,
Anton writes about conflicts in the field with some detachment,
even while remaining aware that the discoveries may change life
in ways we can’t yet picture. The initial phase of the
research he describes consisted largely of experiments with
yeast cells and microscopic worms conducted in the 1990s. Both
are short-lived, meaning that the impact of biochemical adjustments
to their genetic “thermostats” for longevity would
register quickly.
During
the second phase of Anton’s narrative, lab research involved
more complex organisms. But that that was not the most important
development. The public began hearing news flashes that scientists
had discovered that the key to a longer life was, say, restricted
caloric intake, or a chemical called resveratrol found in red
wine. Findings presented in scientific journals were reported
on morning news programs, or endorsed on Oprah, within days
or even hours of publication. Hypotheses became hype overnight.
This
generated enthusiasm (more for drinking red wine than restricting
calories, if memory serves) as well as additional confidence
that biotechnological breakthroughs were on the way. Everybody
in longevity research, or almost everybody, started a company
and ran around looking for venture capital. Models, evidence,
and ideas turned proprietary information -- with the hurry to
get one’s findings into professional journals looking
more and more like the rush to issue a press release.
So
far, no pharmaceutical has arrived on the market to boost our
life spans as dramatically as the worm and yeast cells in the
laboratory worms. “The dustbin of medical breakthroughs,”
Anton reminds us, “bears the label ‘It Worked in
Mice.’ ” On the other hand, the research has been
a boon to the cosmetics industry.
As
it is, we’re nowhere near ready to deal with the cumulative
effect of all the life-extending medical developments from the
past few decades. The number of centenarians in the world “is
expected to increase tenfold between 2010 and 2050,” the
author notes, “and the number of older poor, the majority
of them women,” is predicted “to go from 342 million
today to 1.2 billion by that same year.”
But
progress is ruthless about doing things on its own terms. Biotech
is still in its infancy, and its future course -- much less
its side effects -- is beyond imagining. The baby on the magazine
cover might well live to see the first centenarian win an Olympic
medal. I wish that prospect were more cheering than it is.
by Scott McLemee
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The
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