UCSF Today

Thursday, November 29, 2007

UCSF’s Kenyon One of Ten Honored with 2008 AARP The Magazine Inspire Award

Cynthia Kenyon

(Adapted from AARP news release)
 
AARP The Magazine has announced the recipients of its 2008 Inspire Awards. The Inspire Awards (formerly called the Impact Awards) pay tribute to 10 extraordinary people whose contributions inspire others to action through their innovative thinking, passion and perseverance.
 
UCSF molecular biologist Cynthia Kenyon, PhD, was selected to receive one of the 2008 Inspire Awards for her work as a “Pioneering Longevity Researcher.” Kenyon, the American Cancer Society Professor and director of the Hillblom Center for the Biology of Aging at UCSF, was responsible for the startling discovery in 1993 a change in just one gene, called daf-2, doubled the lifespan of the much-studied roundworm C. elegans . This finding led to the understanding that lifespan is regulated by genes and is therefore changeable, rather than the inevitable result of the body’s breakdown. The discovery in worms has been confirmed in other animals including mice.
 
In October, new research by Kenyon, reported in the journal Nature Genetics, identifies naturally occurring processes that allow many genes to both slow aging and protect against cancer in C. elegans. Many of the worm genes have counterparts in humans, suggesting that new drugs may some day ensure a long, cancer-free life. The new research and a related study the scientists reported in Science last year indicate that cellular changes leading to longevity antagonize tumor cell growth.

In addition to Kenyon, this year’s Inspire Award honorees include Caroline Kennedy (Community Service Advocate), Gary Sinise (Fundraiser for Operation Iraqi Children), Gladys Knight (Champion for Diabetes Research), Barbara Morgan (Courageous Educator), Liviu Librescu (Virginia Tech Hero), Helen Thomas (Trailblazing Journalist), Ed Boyer (Founder of Air Transportation Aid), Roslyn Hill (Leader of Neighborhood Revitalization), and Pete Garcia (Affordable Housing Advocate).

“The Inspire Awards showcase people who are using their passion for action to make the world a better place,” said Steven Slon, editor of AARP The Magazine. “These leaders who innovatively support and spark change within their communities are an inspiration to us all.”

Honorees will receive their Inspire Awards during a private luncheon hosted by Barbara Walters at the New York Public Library on Dec. 3, 2007. Their profiles appear in the January/February 2008 issue of AARP The Magazine and online.


Related Links:

Cynthia
Kenyon: Longevity Researcher


AARP The Magazine, January/February 2008


Genes that
  Both Extend Life and Protect Against Cancer Identified


  UCSF Today, Oct. 15, 2007


WNYC’s
  Radiolab Interviews UCSF Researchers About “Life’s Limit”
  and “Fountains of

  UCSF Today, July 20, 2007


Discover:
  Cynthia Kenyon and Anti-Aging Genes


  UCSF Today, May 29, 2007


Charlie Rose
  and Cynthia Kenyon Explore the Science of Living Longer


  UCSF Today, April 2, 2007


Aging: Will
  Research into “Longevity Genes” Help Us Live Longer and Healthier
  Lives?


  UCSF Today, Jan. 12, 2007


Is Aging a Disease? A Conversation with Cynthia Kenyon

  UCSF Science Café, Jan. 10, 2007

  Read it | Hear
  it


Live Long and Prosper: A Conversation About Aging with Cynthia Kenyon

  UCSF Science Café, Jan. 4, 2007

  Read it | Hear
  it



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


  UCSF Today, July 7, 2006


Scientists
  Find What Type of Genes Affect Longevity


  UCSF News Release, June 29, 2003


Cynthia Kenyon: Probing
  the Prospects of Perpetual Youth


  UCSF Magazine, May 2003


Experimental
  “Gene Switch” Increases Lifespan with No Ill Effects


  UCSF News Release, Oct. 24, 2002


Kenyon Lab