@scrdest:
Oh, I know. extreme environments are nutrient poor, or at least so marginally viable as an evolutionary niche that even small upsets can make or break the survivability of such creatures. There are already a few extremophile microbes that I had in mind for adaptation candidates, but getting them used to the strongly denaturating conditions of the Venusian upper atmosphere would be no small feat. (the candidates I have in mind are already high temperature, are sulphur cycle chemotrophs, and used to high pressure. They just are evolved for life in deep ocean vents, and not for life in absurdly high pH, low water environments. It would take substantial changes to the lipid layers of the cell membrane to withstand that environment, and the question remains if there would be enough bioavailable energy to sustain the microbe's now expanded biological needs just for survival, let alone tack adding a most likely inefficient liability on there, which is what a man-made pathway to produce small crystals of aramid plastic would do to the poor things. Sadly, aramid is easily broken down by exposure to high pH, so to be a viable aproach for the intended use, the plastic has to stay inside the cell, and rely on the cell membranes staying partially intact as the creatures die, and get rained down to the hellish surface below. Down there, the plastic is right on the edge of being thermostable, and should be able to accumulate on Venus' various mountain tops.
I know full well it would not be something easy to do. I said it would be something fun to do, and being engineered for such vastly alien conditions to pretty much everwhere on earth, the resulting microbes wouldnt be an appreciable contagion risk.
as for regenerative geriatrics, I saw a paper recently on mice that were able to retain the extracellular matrix of thier tissues very late into thier adult lives. I cant remember the name of the gene that was implicated in the knockout study, but it was related to studying atherosclerosis. A novel side effect that was observed was "beautiful skin", which prompted a different study with shaved knockout mice being subjected to absurd amounts of UV light, and rating the resistence to degeneration. IIRC, the results were noteworthy. retaining extracellular collagen longer in life would be a substantial benefit to geriatric medicine.