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Science

Leonard Hayflick, the scientist who found out the reason why nobody lives indefinitely, passes away at the age of 96.

A biomedical researcher, he found that normal cells can divide only a certain number of times before they age which, he said, explained aging on a cellular level.
Updated 2024-Aug-18 00:34

A black-and-white photo of Leonard Hayflick, a man in a white lab coat, holding up a glass container and looking at it intensely.

A black-and-white photo of Leonard Hayflick, a man in a white lab coat, holding up a glass container and looking at it intensely.

His criticism of those trying to find ways to extend the human life span was not just about practicality.
On principle he thought it was a terrible idea. I’m an optimist he told The Guardian in 2001. Anyone who believes in manipulating the human aging process is a terrible pessimist.
I don’t want to be alive when that’s possible. I don’t want to give another Adolf Hitler a Saddam Hussein another 50 years of life.
He continued Every time someone like that dies a natural death people should thank their God whoever that might be for the phenomenon of aging.
There was a wrinkle though. The National Institutes of Health had funded the research on his WI 38 cell line but declined to fund its distribution even as other researchers clamored for samples.
Hayflick established a company to process orders charged a minimal fee for shipping and set the proceeds aside until ownership was clarified.
But in a private report that was released to the news media the N. He sued the institute charging invasion of privacy and reputational damage including a forced resignation from his position at Stanford.
The litigation took six years and ended in a settlement that allowed him to keep some of the money and cell samples.
During those six years Congress passed the Bayh Dole Act which allows scientists to profit off government funded research.
The law which would have made Dr. Hayflick’s earlier actions unquestionably legal helped catalyze the biotech industry.
Hayflick married Ruth Heckler in 1955. Along with his son he is survived by four daughters Deborah Curle Susan Hayflick Rachel Hastings and Annie Hayflick eight grandchildren and his sister Elaine Rosamoff.
 
Leonard Hayflick a biomedical researcher who discovered that normal cells can divide only a certain number of times setting a limit on the human life span and frustrating would be immortalists everywhere died on Aug.
1 at his home in Sea Ranch Calif. He was 96. His son Joel Hayflick said the cause was pancreatic cancer.
Like many great scientific findings Dr. Hayflick’s came somewhat by accident. As a young scientist in the early 1960s at the Wistar Institute a research organization at the University of Pennsylvania he was trying to develop healthy embryonic cell lines in order to study whether viruses can cause certain types of cancer.
He and a colleague Paul Moorhead soon noticed that somatic that is nonreproductive cells went through a phase of division splitting between 40 and 60 times before lapsing into what he called senescence.
As senescent cells accumulate he posited the body itself begins to age and decline. The only cells that do not go into senescence he added are cancer cells.
As a result of this cellular clock he said no amount of diet or exercise or genetic tweaking will push the human species past a life span of about 125 years.
This finding which the Nobel winning virologist Macfarlane Burnet later called the Hayflick limit ran counter to everything scientists believed about cells and aging especially the thesis that cells themselves are immortal and that aging is a result of external causes like disease diet and solar radiation.
Other researchers later discovered the mechanisms behind the Hayflick limit: As cells divide they create copies of DNA strands but the ends of each copy called the telomeres are a bit shorter than the last.
Eventually the telomere runs out and the cell stops dividing. Dr. Hayflick made other important contributions to science.
He developed a particularly vibrant cell line WI 38 which has been used for decades to make vaccines.
He also discovered that so called walking pneumonia unlike regular pneumonia is caused not by a virus but by a type of mycoplasma the smallest form of free living organism.
 
Hayflick later worked at the University of Florida and since 1988 at the University of California San Francisco where he was an emeritus professor.
The invention of ways to increase human longevity is the world’s second oldest profession or maybe even the first he told the medical journal The Lancet in 2011.Individuals are going to the bank at this moment with enormous sums of money gained by persuading people that they’ve found either a way to extend your life or to make you immortal.
Leonard Hayflick was born on May 20 1928 in Philadelphia to Nathan Hayflick who made dental prosthetics and Edna Silver Hayflick who worked in his father’s office.
He enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania but took three years off to serve in the Army. He graduated with a degree in microbiology in 1951 and five years later received a Ph.
In chemistry and microbiology there. After two years as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston he returned to Penn and the Wistar Institute where he made many of his most important discoveries.
He continued that work at Stanford University in 1968. But it was his work on aging that established his legacy.
Hayflick was an outspoken critic of those who thought they could unlock the science of eternal life he considered that idea an illusion and the pursuit of it a folly if not outright fraud.
Hayflick outside his home in Sea Ranch Calif. The notion that the science of eternal life could be unlocked was he said an illusion.
Laura Ungar Associated Press.

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