File TXT tidak ditemukan.
File TXT tidak ditemukan.
Transcript
_dDqFB-PjWg • How Long Will You Live?
/home/itcorpmy/itcorp.my.id/harry/yt_channel/out/veritasium/.shards/text-0001.zst#text/0190__dDqFB-PjWg.txt
Kind: captions Language: en [Applause] 10,000 years ago the average human life lasted just over 30 years then 100 years ago that number was up to 50 and if you were born in the last few decades in the developed world then your life expectancy is 80 years but that is of course assuming that no major breakthroughs happen during your lifetime that can slow the process of aging and that may be a very bad assumption there's a new series on National Geographic Channel which was developed with GE and the show's creators wanted to present my take on Aging so I'm here at the GE Global Research Center to talk to principal scientist Dr Fiona ginty and this would be kind of an example of you know one of the types of images we would generate so what are we looking at here so these are our cells that are are actively dividing and these are cells that are heading on their way to death or apoptosis aging is not recognized as a disease I mean there are plenty of diseases we do acknowledge like diabetes heart disease Alzheimer's and at their core aging may be responsible for all of them and yet aging seems natural because it's something that we do from birth and for a while it makes us better bigger stronger faster more intelligent but then at some point in your life it reverses and aging makes our bodies Decay and degrade why is that why do we have to age why do our bodies have to Decay well scientists are now realizing there is a fundamental cellular mechanism at the heart of Aging do we age at the macroscopic level because our cells are aging at the microscopic level to a great extent yes there's only a finite number of times a cell will divide key Discovery was made by a biologist named haick he was studying normal human cells and what he found was they can only divide a finite number of times on average it's about 50 beyond that the cell becomes ccent which means it's a aged cell it can divide no longer it lives for a little while but it's the accumulation of these ccent cells in our bodies that leads to aging on the macroscopic scale so it's as though cells have this little timer inside them that tells them when to stop dividing but how do they know and what is that timer so talir are like the uh you so like your shoelaces have you know a little bit of U plastic at the end to stop them from fraying so talir are like the ends of your Sho laces but for chromosomes but for chromosomes so they stop the chromos they keep the chromosome together and they stop it sticking to other chromosomes and so every time a cell divides um it loses some of the talir they estimate about 200 base pairs why is that why can't it just copy to the end you know it's just sort of really the mechanics of it you know there's only so much space when they DNA polymerase does its job of replicating yeah so the tiir and the tiir getting shorter is like your molecular clock the cellular clock inside each cell that tells it how many times it has divided would you want to have your tiir measured well people do get their T Mir measured there have been associations made with lifestyle with exercise showing that longer telr are associated with you know a more active lifestyle exercise what if there was a way to stop the tiir from shortening if we could do that maybe the cells would live forever uh there's another enzyme involved called talamas and it keeps rebuilding like it doesn't let the talir ever shrink so it it rebuilds the telr right exactly there is one animal that doesn't seem to age and that that is the lobster it just gets bigger over time it doesn't get weaker and its chromosomes don't change it has long tares that do not shorten so it only dies when it gets eaten by something else like us so how could we be more like a lobster some people would say maybe I want my taras to be higher for longer mhm would that help I mean would that keep us younger I mean it's balanced because you know in cancer you've got perfect example of talamar being active and it becomes an unregulated growth situation this is the double-edged sword of tiir and Tas cancer cells have really long tiir and they can divide indefinitely and that is the problem with cancer cancer is dividing cells that won't stop and they won't die so in a way cancer is the immortal cell living within us so maybe we've developed the aging process maybe we have tiir that shorten for a very good reason because otherwise they could become cancerous so one of the theories there is that the cells divide that limited number of times because they um it stops them from accumulating damage that may may be detrimental so there's cause them to become cancer exactly over the past years developments in medicine have increased human lifespan more than we could have imagined and I can only expect that the next 100 years will bring similarly incredible results I'm not sure where or how they will take place but you can bet that your life expectancy today will not be the actual age at which you die do you want to find out more about the future of Aging well then you should definitely check out the episode of breakthrough which was directed by Ron Howard that's airing on Sunday November 29th at 98 Central that is just one of six episodes of breakthrough which was developed by National Geographic Channel and GE so I want to thank them for supporting veritasium and I want to thank you for watching oh and I also made a video about the future of energy it's over on the GE YouTube channel so go check it out