“There are a lot of anti-aging products out there these days-with wildly varying degrees of scientific support,” said senior author Trey Ideker, professor at UC San Diego School of Medicine and Moores Cancer Center. More than just a parlor trick, the researchers say it may provide a useful tool for veterinarians, and for evaluating anti-aging interventions. The new methylation-based formula, published July 2 in Cell Systems, is the first that is transferrable across species. Then trace your finger straight over to the left to find the corresponding human age. To calculate your dog’s age in “human years” based on epigenetics, find the dog’s age along the bottom axis and trace your finger straight up until you reach the red curve. Since the two species don’t age at the same rate over their lifespans, it turns out it’s not a perfectly linear comparison, as the 1:7 years rule-of-thumb would suggest. The formula is based on the changing patterns of methyl groups in dog and human genomes- how many of these chemical tags and where they’re located-as they age. Instead, they created a formula that more accurately compares the ages of humans and dogs. If there’s one myth that has persisted through the years without much evidence, it’s this: multiply your dog’s age by seven to calculate how old they are in “human years.” In other words, the old adage says, a four-year-old dog is similar in physiological age to a 28-year-old person.īut a new study by researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine throws that idea out the window. How Old Is Your Dog in Human Years? Scientists Develop Better Method than ‘Multiply by 7’ By mapping molecular changes in the genome over time, UC San Diego researchers developed a formula to more accurately compare dog age to human age-a tool that could also help them evaluate how well anti-aging products work.
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