virus: Unpublished 1977 letter to Science

From: Keith Henson (hkhenson@rogers.com)
Date: Sun Nov 30 2003 - 19:31:40 MST

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    Last night in chat I mentioned this letter.

    I had not thought about this for a long time. Science didn't publish the
    letter. Dr. Hayflick wrote me asking for a copy of the bamboo article. (I
    still have a copy of his letter.) After I wrote it, someone pointed me to
    another source where someone had proposed very close to the same rational
    for cell limits.

    Still, given what we can do with reading genes nowadays, there is a PhD
    thesis out there for the person who identifies the counter mechanisms for
    bamboo or the 13/17 year cicada.

    I came reasonably close to describing the way telomers function, something
    that was not well understood until the early 1990s. Figured I would put it
    up for your amusement and the public record value.

    Keith Henson

    ******************

    [Address and telephone long out of date!]

    ANALOG PRECISION INC

    1620 N. Park Tucson, AZ 85119 Tel: 602-622-1344

    Aug 2, 1977

    Letter Editor
    Science
    American Association for the Advancement of Science
    151.5 Massachusetts Ave., NW
    Washington D. C. 20005

    HENSON'S Hypothesis--"Cellular aging may be a defense against cancer"

    Two puzzling features of cellular in normal and cancerous
    cells have been known for more then a decade (1) . These are,
    1. a limit on the number of times normal cells will divide in
    culture before "senescing" (i.e., they quit dividing), and 2.
    the observation that cancerous cells or cells transformed by
    viruses or chemical agents are not subject to this limit. To my
    limited knowledge neither a generally accepted mechanism nor a
    satisfactory evolutionary reason has been proposed for cellular
    aging. One theory, that of molecular clocks and programmed
    aging readily accounts for both phenomena but evolutionary
    objections have been raised to this theory. (2).

    Briefly stated the molecular clock theory proposes that
    cells have a counter (perhaps built into the chromosomes)
    which is decremented one count division. In this way,
    a cell "knows" how many divisions have occurred since the
    sperm/egg fusion or some other event. Programmed aging
    refers to the concert that cells would be inhibited from
    further division or killed when the count reaches zero.
    One of many possible physical methods by which this could
    be accomplished would be through the action of enzyme which
    cleaves a DNA base pair from the end of a chromosome at
    each division until the coding for a critical
    sequence was destroyed . (Some way to restore or reset this
    hypothetical "chromosomal counter would also be required,
    otherwise each generation would he shorter than the proceeding
    one!) Molecular clocks per se almost certainly exist,
    there seems to be no other way to explain the accuracy
    of the reproductive cycles of certain bamboo species, one
    of which, Phyllostarchy bambusoides waits 120 years between
    flowerings and then flowers world wide (3). The obvious
    difficulty with which a molecular clock explanation for cellular
    aging is that a complex method to cause an organism's death,
    long after the usual end of the reproductive period, seems
    unlikely to evolve unless is serves some other purpose.

    I believe a good case can be made for cellular senecesence
    (and possibly aging itself) being a side effect of one of the
    defences organisms have against cancer.

    (page 2)

    There are evidently a number of checks that inhibit cells
    from becoming cancerous and evidence exists that several
    mutations are required to transform cells into cancerous
    types. (4). A limit on the number of normally permitted
    divisions may be one of these mechanisms. If so, a cell
    could lost contact inhibition and begin to grow in a cancerous
    fashion, but unless it had also lost the division inhibit
    codon or was continuously resetting the counter, growth
    would stop when the remaining permitted divisions were
    used up. Microscopic invasive growths which might represent
    this class of limited cancers are reported to be 100 times
    more common than unlimited cancers (5). The advantages in an
    evolutionary sense of this line of defense from cancerous
    cells might outweigh the obvious disadvantages of cellular
    aging.

    H. Keith Henson
    BSEE (University of Arizona)
    1620 N. Park Ave.
    Tucson, AZ 85719

    1. Hayflick, L. "The Limited In Vitro Lifetime of Human Diploid
    Cell Strain," Expl. Cell Res. 37: 614-663 (1965).

    2. Orgel, L. E., "Aging of Clones of Mammalian Cells," Nature,
    Lond. 243, 441-445 (1973).

    3. Jazen, D. H. "Why Bamboo Waits So Long To Flower," Ann. Rev.
    Ecol. Syst. 1976 7:347-91.

    4. Emmelot, P. and Scherer, E. "Multi-Hit Kinetics of Tumor
    Formation, with Special Reference to Experimental Liver and Human
    Lung Carcinogenesis and Some General Conclusions," Cancer Res.
    37, 1702-1708, (June 1977).

    Carnes, J. "The Cancer Problem," Sci. Amer. Vol 233, Nov. 1975.

    cc to referenced authors.

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