Research
AI can tackle ageing’s true complexity

A new study has demonstrated that artificial intelligence can be used not just to accelerate drug discovery, but to fundamentally transform how it’s done – by targeting the full complexity of biological ageing.
In a collaboration between Scripps Research and Gero, a biotechnology company focused on ageing, scientists developed a machine learning model trained to identify compounds that act across multiple biological pathways – a process known as polypharmacology.
Instead of seeking a single “magic bullet,” the system embraces ageing as a complex, multifactorial process – and finds drugs to match.
When tested in Caenorhabditis elegans, a widely used model organism in ageing research, the compounds extended lifespan in over 75 per cent of cases. One increased lifespan by 74 per cent, placing it among the most effective life-extending compounds ever recorded in this model.
“Traditional drug discovery obsesses over precision, aiming to modulate a single pathway with laser-like focus,” said Dr. Peter Fedichev, CEO of Gero.
“But ageing doesn’t work that way. It’s systemic, intertwined, and defies one-dimensional solutions. That’s what our approach embraces.”
Until recently, intentionally designing multi-target drugs was considered impractical across most areas of medical research due to the complexity involved and increased risk of side effects.
Such compounds were often discarded rather than developed. The research by Fedichev and Dr. Michael Petrascheck, professor at Scripps Research, demonstrates that AI can now navigate this complexity, making their research the first known example of AI successfully designing polypharmacological interventions for ageing – by intention, not chance.
“It’s not just an incremental step. This is a genuine step change,” said Petrascheck. “It shows that AI can help researchers tackle exponentially more complex biological questions than they could have unassisted.”
From a translational perspective, the findings lay the foundation for a new generation of therapeutics that act systemically, not in isolation.
“The main impact is on the future development of drugs that can extend lifespan and treat chronic, age-related diseases,” said Petrascheck.
“Intentional polypharmacology increases the likelihood of efficacy because ageing isn’t the failure of one system – it’s the gradual breakdown of many systems simultaneously.”
This research was conducted by Petrascheck’s laboratory at Scripps Research, with support from the National Institutes of Health. Fedichev and Gero contributed the AI algorithm, which identified and selected compounds for the study.
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