Older mice seem to benefit from such an arrangement, developing healthier organs and becoming protected from age - related disease.
Not exact matches
The oversized
mice seemed to grow
old prematurely.
«The
mice also did not
seem to gain weight when they got
older, like normal
mice do.
The young
mouse's blood
seems to rejuvenate the
old mouse, regenerating its wasting muscles and restoring its cognitive abilities.
One substance in the blood of
old mice, a protein called Beta ‑ 2 ‑ microglobulin, or B2M,
seemed to prematurely age the young ones, Villeda and colleagues reported last year in Nature Medicine (SN: 8/8/15, p. 10).
Those antibodies also
seemed to help the brains of
older mice that had aged naturally, the team found.
In 2005, Rando and his colleagues published a study in Nature showing that stem cells in several tissues of
older mice, including muscle,
seemed to act younger after continued exposure to younger
mice's blood.
Although these
mice are smaller than their normally fed peers, they
seem to retain their youthfulness and intellects well into their extended
old age.
It was one of the most mind - bending scientific reports in 2014: Injecting
old mice with the plasma portion of blood from young
mice seemed to improve the elderly rodents» memory and ability to learn.
Plugging your
old keyboard and
mouse into it would
seem like an affront to your PC's raw unbridled power.