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Human cells ageing 'reversed by 30 years'

Season 1

Researchers have found a way to reverse the ageing of human cells by 30 years. They tried a new technique on human skin cells, and managed to partly restore the function of older cells, while renewing their biological age at the same time.


London Zoo is using jumping spiders to try to help people overcome their arachnophobia. The neon-coloured spiders can leap six-times their body length.


Plus, Activision Blizzard is giving a thousand game testers full-time jobs, a dinosaur specialist explains the significance behind the North Dakota asteroid fossil site, a post mortem of ‘extraordinary’ Greenland shark reveals it had meningitis, the new Snapchat lens that can teach you sign language, and Returnal is named best game at Bafta Games Awards.


In this episode:


  • Cambridge researchers reverse the ageing process in human skin cells (0.16)
  • London Zoo uses jumping spiders to cure arachnophobia (0.55)
  • Activision Blizzard gives game testers full-time roles (2.03)
  • Why the asteroid fossil site in North Dakota is so significant (2.30)
  • Greenland shark post mortem shows it had meningitis (3.52)
  • Snapchat launches sign language lens (4.43)
  • Returnal wins Best Game at Bafta Game Awards (5.11)


Hear the full interview with Natural History Museum Professor Paul Barrett here.


Follow us on Twitter for the latest news and features @Evening Standard 


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