UCSF Today

Monday, April 2, 2007

Charlie Rose and Cynthia Kenyon Explore the Science of Living Longer

On the third episode of The Charlie Rose Science Series, co-hosts Charlie Rose and Nobel Laureate Sir Paul Nurse, PhD, speak with UCSF’s Cynthia Kenyon, PhD, director, Larry L. Hillblom Center for the Biology of Aging, about Kenyon’s cutting-edge research in genes and aging.

Kenyon has been able to increase lifespan in the roundworm species C. elegans six-fold by manipulating the worms’ genes. “These would be like 500-year-old people playing tennis,” said Kenyon. “It’s amazing… who would have thought this would ever be possible?”

Related Links:

The
  Science of Living Longer


  The Charlie Rose Science Series, March 28, 2007


Is Aging a Disease? A Conversation
  with Cynthia Kenyon

  UCSF Science Café, January 10, 2007
 
Read
  it
| Hear
  it

Live Long and Prosper:
  A Conversation About Aging with Cynthia Kenyon
  UCSF Science Café, January 4, 2007
 

Read
  it
| Hear
  it

Can Kenyon’s
  Roundworms Lead Us to the Fountain of Youth?


  UCSF Today, July 7, 2006

Cynthia Kenyon: Probing
  the Prospects of Perpetual Youth


  UCSF Magazine, May 2003


Wormworld (Kenyon Lab)