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Lifespan Controls Fail


Scientists had previously found that mutations in the Indy (I'm not dead yet) gene in male Drosophila from a particular genetic background result in flies with doubled lifespan. Linda Partridge at University College London and her colleagues aimed to use Indy mutant flies as positive controls for studies on how single genes affect longevity, but instead, they found that the mutants didn't live as long as previous work had shown. Female flies and flies of different genetic backgrounds were immune to the changes in Indy genes completely, and exterminating the cytoplasmic symbiont Wolbachia from male flies abolished the effects of the mutation. 1



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