Restoring the brain’s mitochondria could slow ageing and end dementia

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Restoring the brain’s mitochondria could slow ageing and end dementia
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The discovery that faulty metabolism is at the root of many brain diseases suggests a surprising transplant could be the way to protect our brains from the ravages of ageing

IF YOU own a car, you will have noticed the engine getting less efficient with time. The further you drive it, the more fuel it takes to make the same journey – until, eventually, it becomes so underpowered that it needs a physical push to climb even a gentle hill.

Now, it is emerging that much the same is true of the human brain. Microscopic structures called mitochondria, found in every brain cell, are quite literally the engines of our thoughts and feelings. As we age, they find it harder and harder to produce sufficient energy to power our mental activities. Worse, in a similar way to an old car leaving clouds of smoke in its wake, the cell’s powerhouses start generating unwanted waste products that slowly poison our brains.

According to this “grand unified theory” of neurodegeneration, we could prolong our brain’s healthy functioning by recharging our neurons through restoration of their powerhouses. The idea is already inspiring some exciting new therapies for age-related brain conditions, with multiple drug candidates under investigation. Some researchers are even exploring the possibility of transplanting healthy mitochondria into damaged, ageing brains to re-energise them.

, a neurologist at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. “So what happens if we try to do the …

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