'200 years old' lab mouse dies :: AP
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Bruce Klein
, Mar 04 2003 03:36 AM
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Posted 04 March 2003 - 03:36 AM
'200 years old' lab mouse dies
January 19 2003
A Methuselah of mice has died in a laboratory at a US university, school officials said.
The dwarf mouse, otherwise known as GHR-KO 11C, died January 8 after living the equivalent of 180 to 200 human years, said Andrzej Bartke, a physiologist who worked with the mouse.
At four years, 11 months and three weeks old, the lab mouse lived about twice as long as its species' average of two to two and a half years, and more than eight months longer than its closest rival at Southern Illinois University.
"This mouse was just amazing," Bartke said.
The rodent was genetically engineered not to respond to a growth hormone, a possible reason behind its longevity, Bartke said.
He added that the mouse's low levels of insulin and glucose might also have had something to do with its long life.
Scientists placed the eight-gram mouse in a longevity study when they started to notice he was outliving his peers, Bartke said.
GHR-KO 11C's remains have been sent to the University of Texas at San Antonio for further longevity research.
Southern Illinois spokesman KC Jaehnig said no overall data base exists to determine whether the mouse was the oldest ever.
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