Research into the physiological causes of aging—that process characterized by decreased survival capacity on the part of an organism—has produced few undisputed facts. Until the 1960's, many scientists agreed with Carrel’s view of aging. Carrel claimed that animal cells cultivated in an artificial environment outside the animal's body were imperishable because they could divide indefinitely. If such cells could perpetuate themselves indefinitely when sustained by an optimal environment, Carrel concluded chat the causes of aging were located in the interaction of cells within an inadequate tissue environment. However, Hayflick’s experiments, using cells cultivated in a similar artificial environment, decisively demonstrated that normal (though not abnormal) cells have only a limited life: span and so are not “immoral.” These experiments fundamentally weakened Carrel’s conclusion since they strongly suggested that aging resulted from changes in the properties of cells themselves. Hayflick added that one explanation for Carrel's long-lived cells was that Carrel might have inadvertently introduced new living cells when he renewed the nutrient solution in which he grew his cultivated cells.
Yet if scientists currently agree that the causes of aging are located at the cellular level, they disagree about which ceils are responsible for aging. One hypothesis maintains that aging is caused by loss of or injury to postmitotic cells (cells incapable of division); this hypothesis has received some support from experimenters. Experiments by McCay, for example, demonstrated that rats live longer than usual when underfed. Although scientists have proposed several explanations for this longevity, proponents of the postmitotic hypothesis argue that underfeeding protects postmitotic cells from disease. If aging is postponed because postmitotic cells are protected, then the hypothesis that aging is caused by damage to postmitotic cells is indirectly supported. On the other hand, Szilard’s experiments with mice, demonstrating that exposure to ionizing radiation shortens life, seem to weaken the postmitotic hypothesis. In these experiments, dividing, or mitotic, cells were more susceptible to radiation damage than were postmitotic cells. If radiation shortens life and primarily affects mitotic cells, perhaps these cells are responsible for aging. In fact, many scientists believe that loss of or damage to mitotic cells causes aging. Burnet, a Proponent of one version of this second hypothesis, argues that damage to mitotic lymphocytes promotes aging by exciting the body's immunological system to attack the body's own tissue. Burnet’s clever hypothesis is weakened, however, by the fact chat immunological defects are twice as common in women as in men, yet, On the average, women live considerably longer than men.
Resolution of the mitotic versus postmitotic debate is made difficult by the shortage of suitable research Organisms (species with short life spans and genetic uniformity, among other characteristics); if more of such species could be located, conclusive experimentation on aging might be possible.
1. According to the passage, the research of Carrel and Hayflick had which of the following in common?I. Cultivation of an animal's cells outside of the animal’s body
II. Location of the causes of aging only in the properties of cells themselves
III. Investigation of the ability of cells to divide indefinitely
(A) II only
(B) Ill only
(C) I and H only
(D) I and III only
(E) I, I, and II
2. According to the passage, Hayflick believed that Carrel might have made which of the following errors in his research?(A) Persistent failure to analyze the behavior of abnormal cells
(B) Reliance on outmoded data about aging
(C) Study of postmitotic cells at the expense of investigating mitotic cells
(D) Provision of an inadequate nutrient solution for cultivated cells
(E) Inadequate control of the substances added in the nutrient solution
3. The passage suggests that abnormal cells differ from normal cells in those abnormal cells(A) are not capable of division
(B) do not have a limited life span
(C) are more susceptible to injury than are normal cells
(D) may not excite the body’s immunological system to work against the body’s own tissue
(E) are more frequently studied as a possible cause of aging than are normal cells
4. The author suggests that some scientists have responded to the results of McCay’s experiments by doing which of the following?(A) Accounting for the results by explanations other than the one offered by proponents of the postmitotic hypothesis
(B) Interpreting the results as weakening both the mitotic and the postmitotic hypotheses of aging
(C) Arguing that the results are more conclusive in demonstrating that damage to postmitotic cells Causes aging than in demonstrating that protection of such cells tends to Postpone aging
(D) Using the results more often to disprove the mitotic hypothesis of aging than to confirm the postmitotic hypothesis
(E) Using the results to dispute the claims of those who argue thar disease is the primary cause of aging
5. According to the Passage, experiments in which rats were underfed indicate that(A) an animal’s normal life Span is difficult to predict
(B) rats have greater longevity when underfed than do other research animals
(C) protection of an animal's postmitotic cells does not seem to affect the aging process in the animal
(D) efforts by researchers to locate the causes of aging in the properties of mitotic cells are unlikely to succeed
(E) the length of a rat's life is related to the amount of food it eats
6. According to the Passage, ionizing radiation is thought to have which of the following effects on aging?(A) Promotion of aging by damaging mitotic cells
(B) Promotion of aging in mice more than in humans
(C) Promotion of aging because such radiation is the primary cause of immunological defects
(D) Promotion of aging despite the fact that such radiation does not affect postmitotic cells
(E) Promotion of aging as well as its Postponement
7. The author mentions the experiments of Szilard most probably in order to(A) give an example of research on aging that has prompted contradictory interpretations by scientists
(B) refute the data from McCay’s experiments concerning the effects of underfeeding on rats
(C) prove thar ionizing radiation is not the most important factor in promoting the aging process
(D) support the contention that mitotic and postmitotic cells are equally affected by ionizing radiation
(E) suggest that scientific research does not entirely confirm the postmitotic hypothesis of aging
8. The author suggests that Burnet’s hypothesis about the causes of aging is one of a number of hypotheses that(A) are weakened by the findings of Szilard
(B) have underestimated the role of the immunological system in promoting aging
(C) have conclusively weakened the postmitotic hypothesis about aging
(D) stress the role of mitotic cells in promoting aging
(E) offer explanations of aging that are different for men than for women
9. Which of the following statements would be most likely to follow the last sentence of the passage?(A) Most scientists believe that such experimentation will probably lead to a revival of Carrel’s hypothesis of aging.
(B) Some scientists believe that such experimentation might be facilitated by the use of the rotifer, an organism that, it has been discovered, meets several requirements set by researchers.
(C) Many scientists believe that the most conclusive experiments will be conducted with Organisms that lack genetic uniformity.
(D) Such experimentation might finally furnish support for Szilard’s research, which has been so persistently questioned by skeptical scientists.
(E) Such experimentation might finally lead Scientists to propose a new hypothesis about aging to replace the cellular model that, because of recent experimentation, is now held in wide disrepute.