Aged rodents
The Center for Aged Rodents (CFAR) specializes in the development
of new animal models for experimental analysis of aging and its
relationship to late life illnesses. The Geriatrics Center colony
in the Cancer Center and Geriatrics Center Building includes over
1400 cages of laboratory mice, including several stocks of exceptionally
long-lived mice. CFAR investigators have pioneered in the production
and analysis of four-way cross mice, in which genetic differences
among the mice - analogous to genetic differences among aging people
- lead to variations in the risk of diseases of the bones, muscles,
and immune system, and variations in cancer risk. Mice of the Snell
dwarf colony carry a mutation in a single gene that slows down aging
in virtually all cells and tissues of the body, producing mice that
are healthy, agile, and cognitively intact at very old age, and
have an average life span about 40% longer than those of normal
laboratory mice. The UM-HET3 mice first developed by the Geriatrics
Center's CFAR program have been selected by the NIH National Institute
on Aging as the only genetically heterogeneous animal to be distributed
nationally for biogerontology research, and have also been chosen
as the model system for NIA-sponsored studies of anti-oxidants and
anti-inflammatory agents thought to retard the ill effects of aging
on multiple diseases. Additional information on these animal models
click
here.
Mouse Intervention Testing Program
The National Institute on Aging has selected the University of
Michigan 's Geriatrics Center as one of three laboratories to receive
funding for a new Intervention Testing Program. Geriatrics Center
scientists, in collaboration with researchers at the Jackson Laboratories
and the University of Texas , will help to select five drugs or
dietary supplements each year, which will then be tested to see
if they extend life span or delay the signs and symptoms of aging
in mice. Scientists at medical schools, research institutes, or
governmental or commercial research units are encouraged to propose
specific interventions that they wish to see tested in this Intervention
Program. Data showing the specific agents do not modify life span
or late life disease will assist the public in evaluating the risks
and benefits of highly-touted additives and supplements, while positive
results - i.e. data showing that a specific agent does have beneficial
effects - will help to direct new attention to agents that could
potentially help prevent or treat diseases of the elderly. More
information about the NIA Intervention Program, including instructions
for those wishing to propose a specific agent or dietary supplement
for evaluation, can be found at the NIA website.

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