Science, Technology & the Future | Alexander Fedintsev: Accumulation of Damage to Long-Living Macromolecules @scfu | Uploaded December 2020 | Updated October 2024, 17 minutes ago.
Interview with Alexander Fedintsev conducted at the Undoing Aging conference, Berlin, 2019.
Alexander Fedintsev is a scientist and machine learning engineer. His scientific background lies in the field of bioinformatics, statistics, and machine learning. Alexander earned his M.S. in computer science from the National Research University "Moscow Power Engineering Institute".
Alexander worked in the Institute of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy as a bioinformatician. He also collaborated with professor Alexey Moskalev's lab on aging research. After quitting academia, Alexander switched to machine learning engineering however he continued collaborating on aging research with professor Moskalev.
He developed a highly accurate non-invasive biomarker of aging based on markers of the cardiovascular system. Now his research interest is mainly focused on the role of extracellular matrix (ECM) in the aging process. He and professor Moskalev recently suggested treating non-enzymatic modifications of long-living proteins (mostly, in the ECM) as a 10th hallmark of aging.
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Interview with Alexander Fedintsev conducted at the Undoing Aging conference, Berlin, 2019.
Alexander Fedintsev is a scientist and machine learning engineer. His scientific background lies in the field of bioinformatics, statistics, and machine learning. Alexander earned his M.S. in computer science from the National Research University "Moscow Power Engineering Institute".
Alexander worked in the Institute of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy as a bioinformatician. He also collaborated with professor Alexey Moskalev's lab on aging research. After quitting academia, Alexander switched to machine learning engineering however he continued collaborating on aging research with professor Moskalev.
He developed a highly accurate non-invasive biomarker of aging based on markers of the cardiovascular system. Now his research interest is mainly focused on the role of extracellular matrix (ECM) in the aging process. He and professor Moskalev recently suggested treating non-enzymatic modifications of long-living proteins (mostly, in the ECM) as a 10th hallmark of aging.
Many thanks for tuning in!
Consider supporting SciFuture by:
a) Subscribing to the SciFuture YouTube channel: youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheRationalFuture
b) Donating
- Bitcoin: 1BxusYmpynJsH4i8681aBuw9ZTxbKoUi22
- Ethereum: 0xd46a6e88c4fe179d04464caf42626d0c9cab1c6b
- Patreon: patreon.com/scifuture
c) Sharing the media SciFuture creates
Kind regards,
Adam Ford
- Science, Technology & the Future - #SciFuture - scifuture.org