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A team of U.S. researchers reported on
Wednesday that according to a new study conducted on worms, an antidepressant called
mianserin might lengthen life. The drug appears to have extended by about 30
percent the life span of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, and although
there is a major difference between worms and humans, the scientists hope to
find out whether the antidepressant has the same effect on people.
But even if mianserin helped us
live longer, we would have to think twice whether to use it or not, as the
life-extending benefits come at a cost. According to Michael Petrascheck of Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research
Center in Seattle, "Weight gain and increased
appetite seems to be one of the side effects. It is one of the reasons these
are not such popular antidepressants.”
The team of researchers led by
Nobel Prize recipient Linda Buck did a random search through 88,000 different
drug compounds before finding four drugs that extended life span by 20 to 30
percent; mianserin, which makes part from a class of drugs known as tetracyclic
antidepressants, had the strongest effect.
This antidepressant seemed to block
brain cell signaling by two neurotransmitters (or message-carrying chemicals):
serotonin, which is related to mood and appetite, and octopamine, which
complements serotonin and signals starvation. However, Linda Buck said that it
was possible that mianserin tipped the balance in the direction of octopamine,
thus tricking the brain into thinking it has been starved.
The scientists that were involved
in this study warned that these were incipient findings and asked people not to
rush to take the drugs in the hope of living longer. "It is a stretch from
a worm to a human being," as Michael Petrascheck said.
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