• Home
  • Academics
  • Student
  • Faculty
  • Community
  • Alumni
  • Opportunities

The Pipette Gazette

0 Comment

Professors Randy Strong and Z. Dave Sharp in the San Antonio Business Journal

06 Apr 2016
anthonyc

Professors Randy Strong and Z. Dave Sharp, researchers at the Barshop Institute of Longevity and Aging,.were featured in the San Antonio Business Journal for their new and improved version of the drug rapamycin.

Rapamycin, a drug derived from microbes discovered in the early 1970s in the soils of Easter Island in the South Pacific, was proven to be the first pharmaceutical capable of prolonging the life spans of older mice, according to research done in San Antonio.

Made in laboratory settings today, rapamycin has long been used by transplant patients to help fight organ rejection. It’s also used in heart stents to prevent clots from forming in vessels and to treat certain cancers.

Rapamycin Holdings CEO Randy Goldsmith explained that the formula known as eRapa is “an anti-aging intervention.”

The eRapa formula has the potential to slow the progression of some age-related diseases like Alzheimer’s and to prevent certain genetically inherited cancers, according to the researchers.

“We’re in that great place where anything’s possible,” Strong said of eRapa in the article.

To see the full article, click here.

Social Share

  • google-share

Filter by categories

  • Academics
  • All Blogs
  • Alumni
  • Alumni News
  • Beyond The Bench
  • Career Development
  • Career Series
  • Community
  • Faculty
  • Faculty Spotlight
  • Final Words…
  • In Press
  • Incoming Student Spotlight
  • Meet The Researcher
  • Opportunities & Upcoming Events
  • Student
  • Student News
  • Words of Wisdom

Recent Posts

  • From Discovery to Diagnosis: How UT San Antonio Researchers Are Transforming Endometriosis Care
  • Esteban Castro Reflects on BIO International Conference and SMDP Scholar Journey
  • GSBS Students Showcase the Future of Biotech at Nucleate Texas Demo Day
  • Wasmuth named Howard Hughes Medical Institute Freeman Hrabowski Scholar
  • Candidacy Ceremony Means More Than a New White Coat