The next step in the youth quest is a technology called chemical reprogramming.
June 9, 2026
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The outspoken longevity scientist David Sinclair has been predicting that one day, youâll go to the doctor and get a prescription that will make you 10 years younger.
Now MIT Technology Review has learned that he has plans to launch human tests of an oral "reprogramming" drug as part of a $101 million competition organized by the XPrize Foundation.
The foundation is offering cash awards to teams able to ârestoreâ a person to an earlier apparent age, as measured by improvements in immune, cognitive, and muscle function.
The grand prize goes to any team able to show a 10-year (or greater) relative improvement after one year of treatment.
Reached by phone, Sinclair, a biologist at Harvard Medical School, confirmed that he plans to give an oral drug mixture to volunteers in a bid to seek âevidence for age restoration in humans.â
The trial, if it goes forward, will be a significant new development in the race to harness so-called epigenetic reprogramming. That technology is based on the discovery, 20 years ago, of powerful genes able to turn an adult cell into a stem cell similar to those found in embryos.
The age-reversal effect is believed to occur via a resetting of molecular controls on DNA known as epigenetic marks, which help determine a cellâs overall metabolism and identity.
Companies are now racing to use that phenomenon for a new form of rejuvenation medicine. Only this January, one of Sinclairâs companies, Life Biosciences , made news by winning approval to launch an initial human trial using a set of powerful reprogramming genes. The company announced today it had treated its first patient.
But that test involves a complex gene therapy and is limited to patientsâ eyes, where it could treat conditions like glaucoma.
Sinclairâs new plan is bolder: a reprogramming drug youâd swallow in order to promote such effects across the body.
âWhat weâre aiming to do is to epigenetically restore the animal and eventually the person,â he says. âIt is true that weâve been doing extensive animal studies with the oral agent and are looking to compete in the XPrize.â
This alternative method, chemical reprogramming, uses drugs to mimic the effects of the embryonic genes. That is significant because drug compounds can travel through the bloodstream, reaching most or all cells in a personâs body.
Some experts expressed caution, saying the chemical process, at least as used in labs, is extremely harsh and not even particularly effective. âWho doesnât dream of whole-body rejuvenation? I think itâs a great goal,â says Sergiy Velychko, founder of Soxogen, a stealth reprogramming company in Boston. âBut these chemicals are used in very, very high concentrations for cell reprogramming.â
Sinclair declined to describe the exact makeup of the drug candidate, code-named SL-100, calling its contents âhighly, highly confidential.â
However, he has previously published lab studies of what he called âepigenetic age-reversal cocktails,â which mixed powerful chemicals with known supplements and commercially available medicines.
Itâs those latter components that would be easiest to test on people, since doctors are free to prescribe them, even for unusual objectives like age reversal. James Clement , head of Betterhumans, an organization that specializes in life-extension studies using existing drugs, said in a message that he is ârunning clinical trialsâ of an oral reprogramming cocktail for Sinclairâs XPrize team.
Sinclairâs team is competing in the XPrize Healthspan Competition , launched in 2023. It follows several previous competitions that focused on commercial spaceflight, lunar landings, and other goals. The XPrize Foundation is led by executive chairman Peter Diamandis, also an active promoter of longevity research.
âIf two teams are equivalent, they would split the award,â says Jamie Justice, a doctor and executive director for the contest, which was bankrolled by Saudi Arabiaâs Hevolution Foundation, âBut it will be incredibly hard to even get to one winner.â
Justice says a judging panel is now in the process of picking 10 finalists from 65 teams that have been exploring health foods, lifestyle interventions, digital trackers, and drug compounds.
Sinclairâs team, Justice says, was a late entrant to the contest, but like all teams, it would be required to move into wider human tests starting this year. âYou have to be ready and in trials,â she says.
The race to harness the reprogramming phenomenon and apply it to living people is heating up, even outside the XPrize competition. On June 2, a startup called NewLimit, founded by the crypto billionaire Brian Armstrong, said it had raised a further $435 million , from investors including Peter Thielâs Founders Fund, to support what it calls âage reprogramming.â
The company says it is working toward delivering genetic repâŠ
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