Documentary Description
Aubrey David Nicholas Jasper de Grey (born 20 April 1963 in London, England) is a British biomedical gerontologist educated at Cambridge University in the UK.
He is the author of the Mitochondrial Free Radical Theory of Aging.
He is now working to develop a tissue-repair strategy that would
rejuvenate the human body and thereby allow an indefinite lifespan — a
medical goal he calls engineered negligible senescence. To this end, he
has identified seven tissue-damages caused by aging that need to be
repaired medically before this can be done.
De Grey argues that the fundamental knowledge needed to develop effective anti-aging medicine
mostly already exists, and that the science is ahead of the funding. He
works to identify and promote specific technological approaches to the
reversal of various aspects of aging, or as de Grey puts it, “the set
of accumulated side effects from metabolism that eventually kills us,”
and for the more proactive and urgent approaches to extending the
healthy human lifespan. Regarding this issue, de Grey is a supporter of
life extension.
As of 2005, de Grey’s work centered upon a detailed
plan called Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence (SENS)
which is aimed at preventing age-related physical and cognitive
decline. He is also the co-founder (with David Gobel) and chief
scientist of the Methuselah Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit
organization based in Springfield, Virginia, United States.
A major activity of the Methuselah Foundation is the Methuselah
Mouse Prize, a prize designed to hasten the research into effective
life extension interventions by awarding monetary prizes to researchers
who stretch the lifespan of mice to unprecedented lengths. Regarding
this, de Grey stated in March 2005 “if we are to bring about real
regenerative therapies that will benefit not just future generations,
but those of us who are alive today, we must encourage scientists to
work on the problem of aging.” The prize reached US$4.2 million in
February 2007. De Grey believes that once dramatic life extension of
already middle-aged mice has been achieved, a large amount of funding
will be diverted to this kind of research, which would accelerate
progress in doing the same for humans.
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