The Economist - USA (2022-01-22)

(Antfer) #1

70 The Economist January 22nd 2022
Science & technology


Biotechnology

Backwards ran the sands of time


S


tartups comeand startups go. But few
startups start with $3bn in the bank. Yet
that is the fortunate position in which Al­
tos  Labs  finds  itself.  Though  preparations
for  the  launch  of  what  must  surely  be  a
candidate  for  the  title  of  “Best  financed
startup in history” have been rumoured for
months,  the  firm  formally  announced  it­
self,  and  its  modus operandi,  on  January
19th.  And,  even  at  $3bn,  its  proposed  pro­
duct  might  be  thought  cheap  at  the  price.
For  the  alchemy  its  founders,  Rick  Klaus­
ner,  Hans  Bishop  and  Yuri  Milner,  hope
one day to offer the world is an elixir of life.
Others  have  tried  this  in  the  past.  In
2013  an  outfit  called  Calico  Life  Sciences
was set up under the aegis of Google (now
Alphabet),  with  Larry  Page,  one  of  that
firm’s  founders,  as  an  interested  party.  It
has yet to generate a product. In the same
year Craig Venter, who ran a private version
of  the  human  genome  project,  and  Peter
Diamandis,  who  started  the  X  Prize  Foun­
dation, got together to launch Human Lon­
gevity,  though  they  subsequently  fell  out.
That  company,  too,  has  gone  quiet.  And

there  are  a  string  of  other  hopefuls  in  the
field, many with billionaires like Dr Milner
and Mr Page lurking in the background. In­
deed,  there  are  rumours,  which  Altos  will
not confirm, that Jeff Bezos is one of its in­
vestors—for  the  prolongation  of  life  is  a
field  that  seems  particularly  attractive  to
the man (and it usually is a man) who oth­
erwise has everything.

A walk in the hills
The  founders  of  Altos  do,  though,  seem
deadly  serious  about  what  they  are  up  to.
Looking at discoveries in biology made ov­
er  the  past  few  decades—two  of  these,  in
particular—they  believe  they  have
glimpsed  the  outline  of  an  answer  to  the
question  of  how  to  reverse  the  process  of

cellular ageing. They have also recruited a
star­studded  scientific  cast  to  help  them
track  that  answer  down.  Illnesses  poten­
tially in their cross­hairs include cognitive
disorders  and  neurodegeneration,  diabe­
tes  and  associated  metabolic  problems,
and cancer. Dealing with these might not,
in  the  end,  greatly  extend  average  life­
spans. But it would surely increase what is
known in the argot as healthspan.
The  idea  that  became  Altos  was
dreamed up by Dr Klausner, a former head
of America’s National Cancer Institute, and
Dr  Milner,  an  entrepreneur  and  venture
capitalist with fingers in many technologi­
cal pies, in a series of covid­escaping walks
in Los Altos, a hilly, well­heeled suburb on
the  edge  of  Silicon  Valley.  They  then  re­
cruited Mr Bishop, formerly boss of grail,
a  cancer­detection  company,  to  be  the
business brains.
The two findings around which the firm
is built are Yamanaka transcription factors
and  the  integrated  stress­response  (isr)
pathway.  Yamanaka  factors,  discovered  in
2006 by Yamanaka Shinya of Kyoto Univer­
sity,  are  four  gene­regulating  proteins
which serve, in essence, to return a cell to
factory  settings.  In  this  case  “factory  set­
tings” means a state known as pluripoten­
cy that is enjoyed by embryonic stem cells.
Pluripotent  cells  are  those  that  can  give
rise to descendants capable of differentiat­
ing into a wide variety of specialised cells.
Early experiments involving the induc­
tion of Yamanaka factors in laboratory ani­

Rejuvenation has been a fantasy since the dawn of storytelling.
Could an instant unicorn make it come true?

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