John Schloendorn - “Methuselah Foundation Research - Views from the bird and the ant”

Friday, April 13th, 2007

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Date and Time: Friday, April 13, 2007, 4 PM
Location: Kiewit Auditorium at the Arizona Cancer Center, 1515 N. Campbell | map
Title: "Methuselah Foundation Research - Views from the bird and the ant"
Presenter: John Schloendorn - Graduate student at Arizona State University Biodesign Institute, The Methuselah Foundation volunteer.
Presentation Description:

The Methuselah Foundation entertains two major projects to expedite a genuine cure for human aging -- The Mprize and SENS research. I will briefly introduce the two, discuss their strategic rationale, and report on their current status. I will then focus on SENS research in particular, and explain its role in the Foundation's quest for massive financial development.

In the second part of the talk, I will show some data from the current Mito- and LysoSENS projects, intended to obviate mitochondrial DNA mutations and cure all age-related storage diseases, respectively.

I hope that this presentation will convince those interested in leveraging the cure for aging ahead that
the Methuselah Foundation is currently the outermost tip of the longest lever, by far.

“The Methuselah Mouse Prize and the Quest to Cure Age-related Diseases”

Friday, February 2nd, 2007

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Date and Time: Friday, February 02, 2007, 4 PM
Location: Room 2919 at the Arizona Cancer Center, 1515 N. Campbell | map
Title: "The Methuselah Mouse Prize and the Quest to Cure Age-related Diseases"
Presenter: Fyodor Trestoyevsky, MCB Senior who has performed volunteer work for the Methuselah Foundation, which sponsors the Methuselah Mouse Prize
Presentation Description: The Methuselah Mouse Prize is given to researchers who break longevity records in a mouse model. Fyodor Trestoyevsky will give a short overview of the Methuselah Mouse Prize (currently greater than $4,000,000), the rationale for the prize's existence and how it might contribute to the amelioration of human suffering, the teams that are officially competing for the prize, and the differences between humans and mice in terms of aging.