I guess my question is- is it possible with our current technology knowledge etc, to replace one or more parts of the cell, using artificial and/or biological etc material for the replacements, potentially make it so mutations did not cause aging in a way where the aging from the mutations (Im only talking about mutations that cause aging my question not relating to any other causes of aging) is permanent except if/when organ replacements are done.
I'm not sure what you're asking. If it's something like 'is it possible to prevent mutations from becoming permanent?' then I'd say that doesn't really make much sense. A mutation happens when something causes the nucleotide sequence in the DNA to be changed (like changes to base pairs via insertion, deletion, duplication, substitution, ect). See here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutation
http://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/handbook/mutationsanddisorders/possiblemutations
Any mutation a cell incurs in its DNA will be passed to any daughter cell it replicates, and any daughter cells those cells replicate, ect., ect. It may be possible to prevent mutation from occurring or fix one after it has occurred, but preventing it from being permanent? Cells get their instructions from the DNA by a complex process of transcription and translation called http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene_expression" , so if the DNA changes, so do the instructions. Do you see why this is an odd question? In order to make the cell function regardless of what the DNA tells it to do, you'd have to somehow rework that entire process!
Also is your answer correct/do you have the knowledge background etc to answer it (How so) I realize no one can guarantee 100% if the answer is correct though.
To my knowledge, yes. I'm certainly not an expert but I've taken a keen interest in various areas of biology and am fairly knowledgeable. I cannot guarantee anything I say is correct, but I will not make a claim about something without being confident I can back it up.
For example you said it would maybe be possible to replace damaged DNA? is it possible to do that now? thanks
I'd say with confidence that it will eventually be possible with nanotechnology to fix or repair damaged cells so that you never age. But that's only because its hard to place limits on technology, really. Anything that is theoretically possible may eventually be manipulated by technology. Being able to extend lifespans indefinitely is definitely something theoretically possible, and therefore almost certainly something science will accomplish in the relatively near future.
The real question is, when? At the moment, we are far from being able to perform such magnificent feats of bio-engineering. But who knows--we're currently leaps and bounds above what previous generations thought would be technologically possible at this time.