The Hindu Lit for Life 2025: Venki Ramakrishnan explores the science of ageing and mortality

Nobel laureate and biologist Venki Ramakrishnan, in a conversation with journalist and media entrepreneur Sashi Kumar, at The Hindu Lit for Life 2025 on Sunday (January 19, 2025), unpacked the biological and societal implications of ageing.

Drawing from his book, Why We Die: The New Science of Ageing and the Quest for Immortality, Mr. Ramakrishnan offered a broad view of the science behind mortality, framed by evolutionary theory and emerging research.

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Mr. Ramakrishnan touched upon the biology of senescence, where cells lose their ability to divide. This natural process evolved as a defense mechanism against cancer, ensuring that damaged cells do not replicate uncontrollably. Instead, these cells become senescent, secreting inflammatory compounds to signal the immune system to repair or clear them, he explained. However, ageing disrupts this balance. 

“As we grow older, the accumulation of senescent cells outpaces the immune system’s ability to remove them,” Mr. Ramakrishnan said. This leads to systemic inflammation, contributing to chronic diseases and age-related decline.

Mr. Ramakrishnan highlighted caloric restriction as a promising method to slow ageing, noting that it has extended lifespan in animals by activating pathways that enhance cellular repair. However, he cautioned that translating these results to humans remains a challenge due to safety and effectiveness concerns.

He also highlighted experimental approaches to slow ageing, including rapamycin, which extends lifespan in animals but has safety concerns for human use; NAD boosters, aimed at restoring cellular repair mechanisms as NAD levels decline with age; and parabiosis, where transfusions from younger to older subjects show rejuvenating effects in studies. While promising, these methods face challenges in proving safety, efficacy, and practicality for human applications, he said.

A central theme of the discussion was evolution’s role in shaping the human lifespan. Ramakrishnan explained that natural selection prioritises traits that enhance reproductive success, not longevity. “Ageing is a byproduct of evolution favouring genes that help us pass on our DNA. Beyond that, evolution doesn’t care how long we live.” he said.

This evolutionary framework also explains why large animals, like whales, tend to live longer. Their size offers protection against predators, allowing evolution to optimise longer lifespans. In humans, life expectancy has increased from 60 to over 80 in many regions, thanks to advances in public health, medicine, and nutrition. Yet, the maximum lifespan remains capped at about 120 years, said Mr. Ramakrishnan.

However, most of the increase in life expectancy came from solving problems in early life, largely through public health measures like sanitation, clean water, vaccination, antibiotics, and nutrition, he pointed out.

While Mr. Kumar pointed out that with declining birth rates and increasing longevity, many countries, including China, are incentivising larger families to counterbalance demographic shifts, Mr. Ramakrishna stated that slowing the ageing process might inadvertently slow the turnover of ideas, creating a society that becomes increasingly stagnant and resistant to change. This stagnation, he noted, could affect everything from governance to cultural evolution.

The Hindu Lit for Life event is presented by KIA India and is in association with Christ University. Associate Partners: LIC, RR Donnelley, Blue Star, Brigade Group, NITTE Deemed-to-be University, PROchure, Singer, Chennai Port Authority & Kamarajar Port Ltd, Uttarakhand Tourism, Vajiram and Ravi, Indian Bank, Akshayakalpa and ICFAI Group. Realty Partner: Casagrand. Bookstore Partner: Crossword. Food Partner: Wow Momo, Beverage Partner: Beachville, Radio Partner: Big FM, TV Partner: Puthiya Thalaimurai Gift Partner: Anand Prakash. Supported by: US Consulate, Chennai, Water Partner: Repute

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