Technology Quarterly | Blood and guts
What the young can give to the old
Can gut microbes and blood be gifts of youth?
Paul Bert, a pioneering 19th-century French physiologist, added a gruesome new procedure to laboratory experimentation: grafting mice together rather as a gardener grafts branches onto a tree. Part of the idea was to discover what qualities could be passed from one mouse to the other through the blood they now shared. In the 1950s such “parabiosis” experiments led to the suggestion that one such thing was youth. Older rats, after several weeks grafted to younger rats, showed signs of rejuvenation.
This article appeared in the Technology Quarterly section of the print edition under the headline “Blood and guts”