Dengjel J, Suhnel J, Wuttke D, Fuellen G, Rebholz-Schuhmann D, Hoeflich A, Kestler HA, Vera J, Schmitz U, Hoeijemakers J, Schmeck B, Stolzing A, Kowald A, Priebe S
[
Rejuvenation Res,
2012]
In an "aging society," health span extension is most important. As in 2010, talks in this series of meetings in Rostock-Warnemunde demonstrated that aging is an apparently very complex process, where computational work is most useful for gaining insights and to find interventions that counter aging and prevent or counteract aging-related diseases. The specific topics of this year's meeting entitled, "RoSyBA: Rostock Symposium on Systems Biology and Bioinformatics in Ageing Research," were primarily related to "Cancer and Aging" and also had a focus on work funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). The next meeting in the series, scheduled for September 20-21, 2013, will focus on the use of ontologies for computational research into aging, stem cells, and cancer. Promoting knowledge formalization is also at the core of the set of proposed action items concluding this report.
Blau H, Lundblad V, Ingram D, Effros RB, Austad S, Chesselet MF, McElhaney J, Kaeberlein M, Saag M, Johnson TE, McCarter R
[
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci,
2008]
In this era of genomics and other exciting technical advances, research on the biology of aging is undergoing a renaissance. This report summarizes 10 cutting-edge areas of research covered in symposia that spanned such topics as stem cells, novel vaccine strategies, nutritional sensing, new concepts of Parkinson''s disease, high throughput screening for aging interventions, manipulating telomerase in cancer and immunodeficiency, synergy between aging and HIV disease, and epigenetic influences on aging. Novel animal models, including those showing no evidence of aging, as well as ethical and political implications of embryonic stem cells and alternative medicine are also discussed.