12–17 Jul 2026
University of Graz
Europe/Vienna timezone

Maximal human lifespan in light of a mechanistic model of aging

15 Jul 2026, 08:30
20m
11.02 - HS (University of Graz)

11.02 - HS

University of Graz

130
Contributed Talk Systems Biology and Biochemical Networks Contributed Talks

Speaker

Ben Shenhar (Weixma)

Description

Why has maximal human lifespan barely changed in the past two centuries? To understand this we make a mechanistic link between cellular damage, survival curves, and maximum lifespan using a validated stochastic model of damage accumulation and extensive human data. We show that maximal lifespan is set mainly by damage production and clearance rates, as in progeroid syndromes. In contrast, lifestyle factors such as exercise, nutrition, and sleep chiefly reduce stochastic noise and raise the damage level compatible with survival, shifting the median but not the maximum. Similar constraints arise in other mortality models. Our analysis predicts that lifestyle can extend maximal lifespan by at most ~1 year; substantial gains will require directly perturbing damage production or removal, suggesting specific molecular targets.

Author

Ben Shenhar (Weixma)

Co-authors

Shachaf Frenkel (Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science) Tomer Levy (Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science) Uri Alon (Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science)

Presentation materials

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