Agentic AI Against Aging: Longevity x AI Networking & Demo Day (San Francisco)

Agentic AI Against Aging: Longevity x AI Networking & Demo Day

OCT 25, Saturday, October 25

1:00 PM - 6:00 PM PDT

Frontier Tower @ Longevity / Floor 11 995 Market Street, San Francisco :arrow_upper_right:

After 20 days we present the agentic solutions of the hackathon!

But this event is more than that, meet likeminded people & become active in the community!

The event includes:

  • Amazing food!

  • Free Functional Age Test (Ultrahuman)

See you there 🧬

View More Information about the Event

2 Likes

I’ll look into the results from this event at some point, maybe. Just to see what it would say, I asked GPT-5-thinking to “think outside the box”, specifically asking it to:

Theorize about a supplement or food that might stimulate DNA repair mechanisms, yet has not been widely discussed in the news or in many (or any) scientific papers.

And here is what it came up with:

  1. N-acetyl-glucosamine (GlcNAc) → more O-GlcNAc “tuning” of the DNA-damage response

Why it might work: Many repair proteins (H2AX, MDC1, 53BP1, ATM/ATR pathway components) are dynamically decorated with an O-linked sugar (O-GlcNAc). Changing O-GlcNAcylation can alter double-strand break signaling and even the balance between repair pathways (e.g., HR vs NHEJ) in cells.

And

  1. Uridine-rich foods (e.g., brewer’s yeast extracts) → steadier nucleotide salvage for repair

Why it might work: Efficient DNA repair needs balanced dNTP pools. Cells can salvage ribonucleosides like uridine, converting them into pyrimidines and (indirectly) deoxynucleotides, supporting replication/repair—especially under metabolic stress.

1 Like

DNA and RNA supplementation has been discussed on another thread and there are links to various papers about it. I am personally experimenting with Brewers Yeast at the moment. It has pushed my urate value up a bit, but not that much.

1 Like