单选题
{{B}}Part B{{/B}}
In the following article some paragraphs have been
removed. For questions 66—70, choose the most suitable paragraph from the lists
A—F to fit into each of the numbered gaps. There is one paragraph which does not
fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
For the first time, scientists have profiled specific genetic
changes during the aging of experimental animals, a discovery that could aid
work to extend life span and preserve health. The study, conducted with mice at
the University of Wiscons in, combines a powerful new genetic technique with
dietary restriction, the only known way to delay the aging process.
66.____________
Moreover, it reveals how a low-calorie
diet, the only known method of slowing aging in several animal species, works at
the most basic level to extend life span and preserve health. Such knowledge,
used in concert with new technologies capable of rapidly surveying the activity
of thousands of genes at once, premises to accelerate the development of drugs
that mimic the age-retarding effects of a low-calorie diet, according to the
Wisconsin scientists.
The Wisconsin team, led by Tomas A Prolla,
a UW-Madison professor of genetics, and Richard Weindruch, a UW-Madison
professor of medicine, profiled the action of 6,347 genes. The team charted
changes in genetic activity in two groups of mice, one group on a standard diet
and another group whose diet had been reduced to 76 percent of the standard
diet.
67.____________
"At the molecular level,
normal aging looks like a state of chronic injury," said Prolla.
However, in a big step forward in understanding how a reduced-caloriediet
works to dramatically slow the physical manifestations of aging, many of the
same genes that exhibited changes in activity with aging in mice on a standard
diet remained almost completely intact in mice on a reduced diet.
"This is a leap in our understanding of how caloric restriction works,"
said Weindruch, a leading authority in the field of diet and aging. "There
hasn't been much consensus on how caloric restriction retards aging."
68.____________
The new study, Weindruch said, tends to
support the idea that caloric restriction works by slowing metabolism, the
chemical processes by which living organisms and cells convert food to
energy.
69.____________
"Taken as a whole, our
results provide evidence that during aging there is an induction of a stress
response as a result of damaged proteins and other macromole cules," the
Wisconsin scientists write in Science, "This response ensues as the systems
required for the turnover of such molecules decline, perhaps as a result of an
energetic deficit in the cell."
70.____________
The new study, according to Weindruch, is important not only because it
provides a genetic map of aging, but because it shows the potential of
harnessing gene chip technology to screen for the effects of drugs on the
process of growing old.
"It gives us a molecular test to see if
an agent can affect the rate of aging," said Weindruch. "There are lots of
implications. If we can understand the molecular mechanisms, we could perhaps
develop drugs that mimic the effects of caloric restriction."
[A] The research is published today in Science. The study is a milestone
in aging research, providing scientists with an intimate look at the ebb and
flow of genetic activity with age, and the roles individual genes play in the
process of growing old.
[B] In the process of metabolism, some
toxic byproducts are produced, damaging proteins and triggering a stress
response that acts to repair damaged molecules and that seems to be governed by
a few select genes. But with age, the body's ability to repair damaged proteins
declines, possibly as a result of shrinking cellular energy levels.
[C] Over many years, studies of several animal species have consistently
shown that reduced diets — 25 to 30 percent less than a typical diet-retard
aging, extend life span and improve overall health in old age.
[D] "This study has analyzed more genes with regard to aging than all
previous studies combined," Prolla said of the study that surveyed 5 to 10
percent of the mouse genome using a "gene ship" — a small glass plate containing
DNA that, when read with a laser, quickly reveals activity levels for thousands
of individual genes. The Wisconsin group found that, with age, the activity of a
very small number of genes — less than 2 percent of those surveyed — changed
markedly. But those genes govern critical biological tasks such as stress
responses, protein repair and energy production, and they changed in big
ways.
[E] The Wisconsin group plans to extend its studies to
monkeys and humans. UW-Madison, at its Wisconsin Regional Primate Research
Center, is the site of a decade-old study of rhesus macaques on a reducedcalorie
diet.
[F] Prolla and Weindruch have filed for a patent covering
the use of gene chip technology in aging research through the Wisconsin Alumni
Research Foundation.