20 Things You Didn't Know About... Immortality
Humans continue to seek after it,
but other life forms have already achieved it.
By Grace Halden in Discover Magazine
1.
Two things are certain in this world: We are born, and we die. But must we?
Billionaire Dmitry Itskov and his group the 2045 Initiative want to cheat death
by creating artificial bodies to house human intelligence.
2.
Itskov and friends think they can develop a hologram “avatar,” housing an
individual’s personality in an artificial brain, within three decades.
3.
Terasem’s LifeNaut project claims to offer longevity today. All you need to do
is create a LifeNaut account and upload as much information about yourself as
possible. Apparently the “mindfile” may be used to reconstruct you in the
future.
4.
Immortality isn’t merely a 21st-century quest. In the third century B.C.,
Chinese Emperor Qin Shi Huang ingested mercury to gain eternal life. It didn’t
work.
5.
We don’t know if anyone tried to resurrect Qin, but in the 1980s,
anthropologist and ethnobotanist Wade Davis documented cases of the “dead”
rising from their graves in Haiti.
6.
Davis claimed that by ingesting tetrodotoxin, a neurotoxin in pufferfish and
other species, the living appeared to be deceased and could later be
“resurrected.”
7. Reviving the dead for real was a focus of the Soviet Union’s
Institute of Experimental Physiology and Therapy, overseen by Sergei
Bryukhonenko.
8. The 1940 video Experiments in the Revival of Organisms
supposedly demonstrated the institute’s reanimation of organs and even
decapitated dog heads.
9.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the world, aviator Charles Lindbergh, along
with scientist Alexis Carrel, conceived of many inventions and procedures to
extend human life, such as an artificial heart perfusion pump. Lindbergh died
of cancer in 1974.
10. While we humans obsess about achieving immortality, other
organisms seem to do it effortlessly. In 2014, scientists revived Pithovirus
sibericum, a virus preserved for 30,000 years in Siberian permafrost,
simply by letting it thaw.
11. The immortal jellyfish (Turritopsis dohrnii)
actually reverses its life cycle. An adult transforms itself through
transdifferentiation — converting one type of cell into another — back into a
juvenile form.
12. Members of another “immortal” species, the tiny
invertebrate Bdelloid rotifers, are all female and reproduce by spawning
identical clone daughters.
13. Scientists have been taking a cue from the little rotifers
and cloning mammals for nearly 20 years, beginning in 1996 with Dolly the
sheep, created by Ian Wilmut’s team at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh.
14. Dolly developed age-related conditions early and died at age
6; sheep often live to 12. Researchers found she had prematurely shortened
telomeres, protective caps on the ends of chromosomes that reduce with age.
15. Although Dolly ignited an ethical debate about cloning
animals, the practice has grown and gone commercial: South Korea’s Sooam
Biotech regularly clones pets for about $100,000.
16. Human reproductive cloning is widely prohibited, but
therapeutic cloning — creating stem cells that are a genetic match to the
patient — is more generally accepted because the cells are used to treat
disease.
17. Unlike most other types of cells, which are programmed to
die after a certain number of divisions, stem cells are immortal because they
can multiply infinitely. Unfortunately, so can cancer cells.
18. The most famous case of cancer-based immortality is that of
Henrietta Lacks, who died of cervical cancer in 1951. Cells from her malignancy
were cultured and used to start a cell line, called HeLa, which lives on to
this day in research labs around the world.
19. HeLa cell-based research has been instrumental in
developing vaccines and fighting AIDS and cancer, but it has not been without
controversy. No one informed or obtained consent from Lacks or her family to
culture her cells.
20. Only in 2013, more than 60 years after her death, did the
National Institutes of Health and Lacks’ descendants agree how her cells and
genetic information would be used. The arrangement establishes a precedent in
cell line research ethics, granting Lacks a new legacy — itself a kind of
immortality.
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