Louise Hecker

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Louise Hecker

Louise Hecker

@HeckerLouise

Research in my lab is focused on 1) why repair responses “go awry” in aging, and 2) developing therapeutics to target age-associated diseases

Katılım Temmuz 2020
182 Takip Edilen282 Takipçiler
Louise Hecker retweetledi
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Psilocybin made human cells live 50% longer. A new study has uncovered surprising anti-aging potential in psilocin—the active metabolite produced when the body breaks down psilocybin, the psychoactive compound found in magic mushrooms. In laboratory experiments, researchers exposed two human cell lines (skin fibroblasts and fetal lung fibroblasts) to a 100 μM concentration of psilocin. The results were striking: lung cells took 57% longer to reach replicative senescence (the point at which cells permanently stop dividing and accumulate damage), while skin fibroblasts extended their replicative lifespan by 51%. These findings suggest psilocin may slow fundamental cellular aging processes, possibly by lowering oxidative stress, enhancing DNA-repair pathways, supporting mitochondrial health, or dampening chronic inflammation—mechanisms that overlap with those targeted by leading experimental longevity drugs. The benefits extended beyond cell culture. In aged female mice (19 months old at the start, equivalent to approximately 60–65 human years), a single monthly dose of psilocybin dramatically improved outcomes. After 10 months of treatment, 80% of the psilocybin-treated animals remained alive, compared with only 50% of untreated controls. Treated mice also displayed markedly fewer visible signs of aging, including reduced fur loss and graying. This research marks the first direct demonstration that psilocybin/psilocin can influence biological aging itself, rather than solely producing psychological effects. The authors emphasize that the study used relatively conservative dosing and are now advocating for follow-up work with higher or more frequent administration, detailed assessments of immune, metabolic, and cognitive function, and investigations into whether the extended lifespan corresponds to genuine improvements in healthspan and quality of life. ["Psilocybin treatment extends cellular lifespan and improves survival of aged mice." npj Aging, 2025]
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Rohan Paul
Rohan Paul@rohanpaul_ai·
🧬 BIG news for Anti Aging inventions. 🍄 Mushroom drug might slow fundamental aging processes. Psilocybin’s active metabolite kept human fibroblast cultures alive 29% longer at 10 µM and 57% longer at 100 µM. Aged mice given monthly psilocybin showed 80% survival, while only 50% of control animals made it through the same 10-month span. Psilocybin has long been tested for depression and addiction, yet many researchers suspected a deeper link between the compound and biological aging because positive mental states often track with longer telomeres, the protective DNA caps that shrink as cells age. The current team put that idea on the bench by switching to a standard replicative-senescence model that forces fibroblasts to divide until they quit. The authors close by framing psilocybin as a possible full-body anti-aging drug that tackles senescence, telomere erosion, oxidative stress, and DNA stability in one shot, while calling for longer studies to rule out late cancer risks and to fine-tune dose and timing. If these findings hold up across sexes, species, and longer lifespans, the compound could join the small club of agents that extend healthy years rather than just treat age-linked symptoms.
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Dr Singularity@Dr_Singularity

Another Anti Aging Breakthrough Psychedelics May Slow Aging at the Cellular Level Psilocybin extended cell lifespan and boosted survival in aged mice, suggesting potential anti aging effects. Psilocybin, a natural psychedelic compound found in hallucinogenic mushrooms, has shown therapeutic potential for psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders. However, its broader biological effects remain poorly understood. New study presents the first experimental evidence that psilocin, the active metabolite of psilocybin, can extend cellular lifespan. Additionally, psilocybin treatment increased longevity in aged mice. These findings suggest that psilocybin may possess significant geroprotective properties.

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David Sinclair
David Sinclair@davidasinclair·
Still struck by the dramatic effects of psilocybin on mouse health & lifespan 🍄‍🟫 Here’s some info about this molecule & where people obtain it: 🧵…
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Nick Jikomes
Nick Jikomes@trikomes·
Full video version of my conversation with Dr. Louise Hecker. We cover her new study on how psilocybin affects aging in mice, plus a more general discussion of oxidative stress, scarring, and fibrosis.
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Ricky Morales
Ricky Morales@RickyMoraless·
Psilocybin reverse aging 🍄‍🟫
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Paul F. Austin
Paul F. Austin@PaulAustin3w·
Forget Botox... Scientists say tripping on mushrooms might keep you young. Mice treated with psilocybin lived longer and had healthier fur, fewer gray hairs, and more hair regrowth. fastcompany.com/91366926/forge…
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Dr Singularity
Dr Singularity@Dr_Singularity·
Crazy Anti Aging Discovery A new study from Emory University reveals that psilocin, the active metabolite of psilocybin (from psychedelic mushrooms), can delay cellular aging and extend lifespan. 👀 Human cells lived over 50% longer, and mice treated with psilocybin lived 30% longer, with improved physical aging signs like fur quality and hair regrowth. The research suggests psilocybin enhances DNA repair, reduces oxidative stress, and preserves telomeres - key factors in aging. This breakthrough points to psilocybin’s potential as a powerful anti aging therapy, beyond its known mental health benefits.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🚨🇺🇸 PSILOCYBIN MAKES HUMAN CELLS LIVE 50% LONGER, STUDY SHOWS Researchers at Emory and Baylor just dropped a bombshell: psilocybin, the magic in magic mushrooms, slowed cellular aging in both human cells and mice. Lung and skin cells treated with psilocin (what psilocybin turns into in your body) took over 50% longer to hit senescence, the stage where cells stop dividing and go full grandma mode. In live trials, 80% of elderly mice dosed monthly with psilocybin were still alive after 10 months. The control group? Just 50%. Even the mice looked better - less fur loss, fewer gray hairs, more energy. Scientists say it’s the first real evidence that psychedelics might not just heal minds… but stretch lifespans too. Source: Science Alert
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Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

@elonmusk @grok Psilocybin, the hallucinogenic compound in magic mushrooms, temporarily resets entire brain networks controlling time and self-perception, according Nature study. x.com/MarioNawfal/st…

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Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.
Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.@hubermanlab·
Psychedelics used to be so edgy to talk about. Now, federal tax $ is used to study their effects in mice & there are human clinical trials completed & ongoing. People are discussing psilocybin for longevity. MDMA & ibogaine likely to gain FDA approval soon. Things. Have. Changed.
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Dr. Rhonda Patrick
Dr. Rhonda Patrick@foundmyfitness·
Psilocybin shows potential as an anti-aging molecule, with lifespan-enhancing results in human cells and mice observed in a new study. In vitro, psilocin (psilocybin’s metabolite) extended cellular lifespan by 29% at baseline and 57% at higher doses. It also reduced markers of aging like β-gal activity, boosted sirtuin (SIRT1) levels, lowered DNA damage and oxidative stress, and preserved telomeres. In vivo, 19-month-old female mice (equivalent to ~60–65 human years) who received monthly psilocybin doses for 10 months had 80% survival vs. 50% in controls. Treated mice also appeared younger—with improved fur quality, more hair growth, and less graying. Although psilocybin is listed as a Schedule I substance, these findings position it as a novel therapy for healthy aging and open a path toward 'psychedelic-assisted senotherapeutics', interventions that may enhance psychological well-being while also slowing genetic aging. No matter your stance on psychedelics, these findings should intrigue you.
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Nature Asia-Pacific
Nature Asia-Pacific@NatureAsia·
.@kosukekatophd and @HeckerLouise @Nature_NPJAging #OA #openaccess paper Psilocybin treatment extends cellular lifespan and improves survival of aged mice nature.com/articles/s4151… @bcmhouston @emoryuniversity
Nature Portfolio@NaturePortfolio

A study in @Nature_NPJ Aging provides evidence that treatment with psilocin, the active metabolite of the psychedelic psilocybin, extends cellular lifespan and psilocybin treatment promotes increased longevity in aged mice. go.nature.com/454uJCH

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