[Reciprocal relation of proliferative activity in central and peripheral zones of splenic organ culture exposed to vilon in rats of various ages].
Bykov. N M NM; Chalisova. N I NI; Zeziulin. P N PN
Key Findings
- Vilon increased cell proliferation in spleen organ cultures from rats of all ages tested.
- The growth response was observed in both central and peripheral zones of the spleen tissue.
- Central and peripheral zones showed opposite (reciprocal) patterns of proliferation when exposed to vilon.
Practical Outcomes
- The findings are purely experimental and done in rat spleen tissue outside the body, so they don't provide any actionable guidance for human health, dosing, or performance. Biohackers should treat this as basic science without direct relevance to longevity or metabolic protocols.
Summary
A lab study looked at how a peptide called vilon affects cell growth in spleen tissue taken from rats of different ages. In a dish, vilon made spleen cells multiply more, both in young and old rats, but the pattern of growth differed between the center and the edges of the tissue.
Abstract
There was studied in spleen organotypic tissue culture the effect of vilon on the development of of proliferative activity in central and peripheral fields of explants of rats of various age: 3 days, 3 weeks and 2 years old. Vilon stimulated cell proliferation both in young and old rats, in spite of all there are reciprocal relations of this process in central and peripheral fields in the spleen organotypic culture of rats of various age.
Study Information
pubmed
2003