Scientist examining extended-lifespan yeast cells under microscope with rapalink-1 cancer drug vial, illustrating anti-aging breakthrough.
Scientist examining extended-lifespan yeast cells under microscope with rapalink-1 cancer drug vial, illustrating anti-aging breakthrough.
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Next-generation cancer drug shows anti-aging effects in yeast

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Researchers at Queen Mary University of London have found that rapalink-1, an experimental TOR inhibitor being investigated for cancer therapy, extends the lifespan of fission yeast. The study also uncovered a role for agmatinases in regulating the TOR pathway through a metabolic feedback loop, suggesting potential links between diet, gut microbes, and aging.

A team from Queen Mary University of London's School of Biological and Behavioural Sciences used fission yeast as a model to test rapalink-1, a next-generation inhibitor of the Target of Rapamycin (TOR) pathway. In work published in Communications Biology in 2025, the study by Juhi Kumar, Kristal Ng and Charalampos Rallis showed that rapalink-1 slows aspects of yeast cell growth while significantly extending chronological lifespan, acting primarily through TORC1, the growth-promoting arm of the TOR pathway.

The TOR pathway, conserved from yeast to humans, is a central regulator of growth and aging and is implicated in age-related conditions such as cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. Drugs such as rapamycin have previously been shown to extend healthy lifespan in animal and cellular models, making TOR a major focus of anti-aging and cancer research.

The researchers also identified a key role for a class of enzymes known as agmatinases, which convert the metabolite agmatine into the polyamine putrescine and urea, as part of a previously unknown metabolic feedback loop that helps balance TOR activity. When agmatinase function was disrupted in fission yeast, cells grew faster but showed shortened chronological lifespan and signs of premature aging, highlighting a trade-off between rapid growth and long-term survival. Supplementing yeast with agmatine or putrescine promoted longevity and improved cell performance under specific conditions.

"By showing that agmatinases are essential for healthy ageing, we've uncovered a new layer of metabolic control over TOR — one that may be conserved in humans," said Dr. Rallis, according to a statement from Queen Mary University of London. "Because agmatine is produced by diet and gut microbes, this work may help explain how nutrition and the microbiome influence ageing."

Dr. Rallis noted that agmatine supplements are already available but urged caution, saying that their benefits for growth appear to depend on certain arginine breakdown pathways being intact and that agmatine can contribute to some pathologies. The findings suggest that future research on healthy aging, cancer biology and metabolic disease could explore strategies that combine TOR-targeting drugs such as rapalink-1 with dietary or microbiome-based interventions.

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Initial reactions on X to the rapalink-1 yeast lifespan study are limited and mostly neutral to positive, with users sharing summaries that highlight its surprising anti-aging effects, TOR pathway regulation via agmatinases, and potential links to diet and gut microbes.

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Split-image illustration of frail elderly male lab mice before and after drug treatment extending lifespan by 73%, with UC Berkeley lab setting.
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Drug combo extends remaining lifespan of frail elderly male mice by about 70%

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A combination of oxytocin and an Alk5 inhibitor significantly extended remaining lifespan and improved health in very old, frail male mice, according to research from the University of California, Berkeley. The treatment increased their remaining life by about 73% but did not lengthen lifespan in females, underscoring key sex differences in aging biology and in responses to longevity therapies.

Researchers have discovered why polyamines, compounds promoted for anti-aging benefits, may also promote cancer growth. The study shows that these molecules activate different proteins in healthy versus cancerous cells, leading to contrasting effects. Led by experts at Tokyo University of Science, the findings were published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry.

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Researchers report that small doses of the antibiotic cephaloridine can prompt certain gut bacteria to increase production of colanic acid, a microbial polysaccharide previously tied to longer lifespan in laboratory animals. In experiments, treated roundworms lived longer and mice showed shifts in cholesterol or insulin measures associated with aging, with the team arguing the approach works by acting in the gut rather than throughout the body.

MIT chemists have successfully synthesized verticillin A, a complex fungal molecule discovered in 1970, for the first time in the lab. The breakthrough enables the creation of variants showing promise against diffuse midline glioma, a rare pediatric brain cancer. This long-elusive compound's structure had thwarted synthesis efforts despite its potential as an anticancer agent.

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A Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory study demonstrated CAR T-cell therapy can reverse age-related intestinal decline in mice by targeting senescent cells. While promising, experts caution on safety risks, off-target effects, dosing, and costs for human use.

Researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison have shown that the protein replication protein A (RPA) is essential for telomerase activity that helps maintain long, healthy telomeres. The work, reported in the journal Science, sheds light on previously unexplained cases of short telomere disorders and may open new diagnostic avenues for patients with conditions such as aplastic anemia and certain leukemias.

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Researchers in Dresden have discovered that the protein MCL1, known for helping cancer cells evade death, also regulates their energy production through the mTOR pathway. This dual role explains why drugs targeting MCL1 can fight tumors but sometimes harm the heart. The team has developed a dietary approach to mitigate this cardiotoxicity, paving the way for safer therapies.

 

 

 

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