Stay cool and live longer?
February 20, 2013
Researchers at the University of Michigan Life Sciences Institute have identified a genetic program that promotes longevity of roundworms (nematodes) in cold environments — and this genetic program also exists in warm-blooded animals, including humans.
“This raises the intriguing possibility that exposure to cold air — or pharmacological stimulation of the cold-sensitive genetic program — may promote longevity in mammals,” said Shawn Xu, LSI faculty member and the Bernard W. Agranoff Collegiate Professor in the Life Sciences at the U-M Medical School.
Scientists had long assumed that animals live longer in cold environments because of a passive thermodynamic process, reasoning that low temperatures reduce the rate of chemical reactions and thereby slow the rate of aging.
“But now, at least in roundworms, the extended lifespan observed at low temperature cannot be simply explained by a reduced rate of chemical reactions,” Xu said. “It’s, in fact, an active process that is regulated by genes.”
Xu found that cold air activates a receptor known as the TRPA1 channel, found in nerve and fat cells in nematodes, and TRPA1 then passes calcium into cells. The resulting chain of signaling ultimately reaches DAF-16/FOXO, a gene associated with longevity. Mutant worms that lacked TRPA1 had shorter life spans at lower temperatures.
Possible in humans
Because the mechanisms identified by Xu and his collaborators also exist in a range of other organisms, including humans, the research suggests that a similar effect might be possible.
The study also links calcium signaling to longevity for the first time and makes a novel connection between fat tissue and temperature response.
Researchers have known that lowering the core body temperature of warm-blooded animals, such as mice, by 0.9 degrees Fahrenheit can extend lifespan by 20 percent, but it hasn’t been practical for humans to attempt to lower the core body temperature, Xu said.
“But if some aspects of the aging process are initiated in skin and fat cells in humans as they are in nematodes, should we go out to embrace some cold air in the winter?” Xu said.
Wasabi: secret sauce for life extension?
Xu added that in addition to cool temperatures, the spicy condiment wasabi activates TRPA1 as well, and that feeding wasabi to nematodes increases their life spans.
“Maybe we should be going to sushi restaurants more often,” he said.
Xu is a faculty member in the U-M Life Sciences Institute, where his laboratory is located and all his research is conducted. He is also an associate professor in the Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology at the U-M Medical School.
Other authors on the paper were Rui Xiao and Yongming Dong of the Life Sciences Institute; Bi Zhang and Jianke Gong of the Life Sciences Institute and the College of Life Science and Technology at the Huazhong University of Science and Technology; Tao Xu of the College of Life Science and Technology at the Huazhong University of Science and Technology and the Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences; and Jianfeng Liu of the College of Life Science and Technology at the Huazhong University of Science and Technology.
This work was supported by the Program of Introducing Talents of Discipline to Universities from the Ministry of Education of China, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and National Institute of Aging, both of the National Institutes of Health.

Comments (19)
by John Grant
Synchronisity? I walked into a thrift shop today and was browsing through old books.I discovered three books there by Ray Kurzweil,singularity being one of them.I did not buy them but found them very interesting.Now just this afternoon I discover he is the featured guest on Coast to Coast tonight.I had never heard of him before and now twice in one day.I think there might be something to this.I will definately be listening tonight.
by SmartAndSober
Wonder why you can get the excellent books by Kurzweil in thrift shops, but not for free on the web.
by SmartAndSober
I would rather live longer starving and shivering. I would rather recieve the worst of all possible tortures than die.
Death is the darkest of all possibilities. Why die if you can avoid it?
by XLife
Starving and shivering just to live longer… 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, 100s isn’t all that appealing. Now if my body can be returned to 25-35yr range and then I could live longer (while remaining 25-35) it may be more appealing to me.
by seeker
mayby it’s some residual effect from genes involved with hibernation in other species ?
by Aaron
I was not aware that nematodes (or any common ancestors we might share with them) hibernated.
by Dr. Richard
Every time someone brings up a number, people start bragging…”My temp is only 26 degrees, and I look really young too!” Why do people think that is going to be written in the Akashic records and all will bow down ?? scientists can turn right around tomorrow and find some worm that lives in volcanic vents with a body temp of 110 F, that lives for 200 years. Then we will hear people comming on here saying they have a hot set of guts. Mothers out there are failing to give complements, these poor babies want to be noticed. This temperature thing is just a matter of adaptation, like everything else with cells.
by anon
So not only can we starve ourselves, we also can choose to shiver to have a slightly increased probability to stay in the game a little longer.
by Dirk Bruere
Well, shivering and starving can certainly make your life seem MUCH longer
by Bri
Let’s see. Red wine, green tea and wasabi. That should add about sixty years to my life. Although I like all of these I think I’ll wait till they learn how to reset the genetic clock. L don’t know about this cooling thing. An Eskimo igloo gets to about forty degrees inside. I don’t think it’s done them much good. The body wants to regulate the core temp for some good reason. Anyway, I wouldn’t want to be cooler than what’s natural now. Unless they can make me not feel the cold. I’d love to know how they got thOSS mice cooler! I’m getting some nasty visual images. Interesting research though. I guess we will be seeing wasabi pills in vitamin stores soon.
by Dr. Richard
I was thinking the same thing….here come the wasabi pills!! Just when people got used to putting curry on their food without gagging, to help their brains.
by SmartAndSober
It is sad that many people rely on Academia/Government/Pharma company etc to tell them What/when to eat.
“Self-Reliance” is a Most Important Virtue of Transhumanists.
I personally am not a expert on nutrition and drugs, but I know Golden Rules: “To Lengthen Thy Life, Lessen Thy Food” and “Maximize your Waking/Lucid Hours, So that You Can Learn And Be Useful (and Avoid Accidents happening when you sleep)”
by SmartAndSober
Just like all other Transhumanist actions, we should participate (at least those who have spare time) in the “BioPunk” movement, perform Bio-Experiments from a Home-Lab.
Futurists/Transhumanists are always radical. It is the Radical People who will survive the Singularity and Control the Universe.
by SmartAndSober
“… we should participate (at least those who have spare time) in the “BioPunk”…”
Should be “… we should participate In Radical Movements like the “BioPunk”…”
by hakan1997
Fascinating stuff. Would this explain the relative abundance of old japanese citizens?
Eat more wasabi…
by Aaron Wright
I don’t think the long life span of Japanese people can be completeley explained by wasabi. Based on this reasearch, it might play some role, but Japanese also drink a lot of green tea, eat a lot of uncooked vegetables, and life a low-stress lifestyle.
by SmartAndSober
” … a low-stress lifestyle.” Not for modern, working Japanese people.
by beatriz valdes
What about having a lower body temperature all the time? That´s my case. I always mark 36 on the thermometer, while 37 is supposed to be the normal temperature. I do happen to look -really- much younger, Might that be helping?
by melajara
Indeed, I rested on the assumption that this correlation could be just a general application of van ‘t Hoff equation relating chemical reactions equilibrium with temperature. Cooling down is slowing down every chemical reaction, obviously this has a sparing effect at the macroscopic level, i.e. organs and organisms.
But wait, active mechanisms have also a sparing effect, just take hibernation as an example. Fine tuning hibernation could be an interim solution before finding the ultimate cryoprotectant for safe cryonics.