
Artificial intelligence (AI) has been the driving force behind a lot of big developments in the last year. But while super-intelligent chatbots and rapid art generation have gripped the internet, elsewhere AI has been used to try and find solutions to one of humanity's biggest problems: ageing.
Researchers at the University of Edinburgh, working in the field of drug discovery, have used machine-learning systems to unearth a selection of new anti-ageing drugs.
Machine learning is a branch of AI that focuses on using data to imitate the way that humans learn, improving its accuracy as its fed more data. In the past, machine learning has been used to create chess-playing robots, self-driving cars and even Netflix recommendations, but in this case the algorithm was looking for senolytics.
Senolytics are drugs that are able to slow ageing, as well as prevent age-related diseases. They work by killing off senescent cells, which, although still alive, are no longer able to replicate. While having cells that don't replicate isn't necessarily a bad thing, they will have suffered damage to their DNA (sunburned skin cells, for example), so stopping replication stops the damage from spreading.
Vanessa Smer-Barreto, a research fellow at the University of Edinburgh's Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine, was investigating new drugs, specifically senolytics, in her post-doctorate research.
Frustrated by the expense and time involved in the process of drug discovery, she turned to machine learning in the hopes of reducing both.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2023-Ausgabe von BBC Science Focus.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2023-Ausgabe von BBC Science Focus.
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