Abstract

The longevity of parallel cultures of the human diploid fibroblast strain MRC-5 was measured at various incubation temperatures. At 37°C the mean life-span was 57.2 passages, at 34°C it was 58.7 passages and at 40°C it was 29.2 passages. There was greater variation in longevity among cultures grown at 40°C than in the control population and least among those grown at 34°C. The decreased life-span at 40°C was probably due to accelerated ageing, as the transfer of senescent cultures back to 37°C did not lead to their recovery. Cultures grown at 32°C also had reduced life-span compared to the control, but this was probably not the result of ageing, as the transfer of cultures which had almost ceased growth back to 37°C allowed them to reach the normal life-span for this temperature. The results imply that clonal ageing is at least in part due to random events—possibly errors in protein synthesis—which occur more frequently with increasing temperature.

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