AGING
Uncovering a Key to Human
Longevity
By Gailon Totheroh
CBN News Health & Science Reporter
CBN.com
BOSTON Ever since Methuselah set the record for human
longevity, quixotic explorers like Ponce de Leon, and even rational
modern day researchers, have been searching for the fountain of youth.
Now prestigious scientists at places like Harvard are saying they may
have found a key to longevity that could add years, even decades, to
human life. Their theory is that a substance in plants could help many
more people start living to a healthy 100 years old.
The inability of science to get to the bottom of aging provided a
motivation for Harvard researcher David Sinclair, even as a young
student in Australia. "If we could just tap into that root cause and
slow it down, we could have a really big impact on diseases around
the world, and that would be a gift to humanity. I wanted to do that,"
he said.
That desire eventually led him to a substance called resveratrol,
which is found in grape skins and 70 other plants. A resveratrol supplement,
for which its manufacturer claims potent biological effects, is scheduled
to be on the market soon. However the best current source is red wine.
In fact, when Italian winegrowers gather to toast one another's health,
they may unknowingly be paying tribute to actual health benefits.
Sinclair said, "We're not trying to make people live six times
as long. I'd be happy if we could make people have another five, 10
years of healthy life without disease. But we are [concerned with]
slowing down these diseases of old age that are really quite horrible
for many people."
Before connecting grapes to longevity, Sinclair observed a related
longevity booster severe calorie restriction. He said that merely
feeding mice nutritious diets with 30 percent fewer calories makes
them live 30 to 50 percent longer.
That may explain why so many Okinawans live to 100 they have very
low calorie diets. Sinclair said, "It's about 60 to 70 percent of
what's recommended for a healthy diet so it's really extreme. And
most physicians wouldn't recommend it, even myself. I don't think
it's particularly healthy unless you can do it under very strict supervision."
So how does drastic calorie restriction lengthen life? That is an
important question, because Sinclair eventually discovered that resveratrol
works the same way. An extremely low-calorie diet stresses the body.
That stress signals a group of genes in the body to produce certain
enzymes. These so-called "SIR2 genes" generate enzymes called
Sirtuins. Sirtuins switch on defenses that protect all the cells in
the body.
And while the low-calorie studies have been done on yeast, worms
and mice, people have these very same SIR2 genes that extend longevity
for lower life forms.
In experiments, some laboratory yeast have been genetically engineered
to have more SIR2 genes, meaning they live about 30 percent longer,
mimicking calorie restriction effects. For humans, that could mean
20 more years of life.
And here is where the grapes come in: the resveratrol activates these
SIR2 longevity genes just like calorie restriction, but without having
to modify man genetically.
So what evidence is there that resveratrol could enhance old age?
To answer this, some evidence comes from looking at the results of
consuming red wine, because it has the highest amount of resveratrol.
Drinking red wine may explain the "French Paradox" the
French eat more fat and calories, but have far fewer heart attacks
than Americans.
Red wine may also explain why so many Italians on Sardinia live to
100. They drink lots of red wine. And, the world's modern longevity
record belongs to Jeanne Calment, a daily red wine drinker who lived
122 years.
But before you start carting off cases of wine, consider the downside
to wine consumption: To get the required daily dose of resveratrol
from wine would be very expensive, at least $1,000 a year. Also, alcohol
is very destructive of the liver and depletes the body of the vital
mineral magnesium. And lastly, but most importantly, alcohol can cause
addiction and destroy lives.
So how do you get enough of the good effects of resveratrol without
the bad effects of alcohol? Alcohol-free red wine might work, except
that even in alcohol-containing red wine, resveratrol levels vary
greatly from year to year at the same vineyard. Table grapes are not
the answer either, primarily because eating them does not extract
the resveratrol as winemaking does. Sunlight also depletes the biological
activity of resveratrol.
Perhaps try resveratrol supplements? Sinclair did tests on them and
found they do not have enough of what are called "Sinclair units."
That is largely because supplements tend to lose their benefits after
manufacture, largely because oxygen in the air destroys the fragile
resveratrol molecule.
But the good news is that Sinclair has developed a manufacturing
process to preserve the resveratrol in pill form. He prefers not to
say a lot about that pill because he was, until recently, the lead
consultant to a company using the process to introduce what is believed
to be the first stabilized resveratrol in a pill - a product called
Longevinex.
Sinclair said, "Myself, I don't tolerate red wine very well
and I don't want to drink red wine every time I get up in the morning,
so having it in a pill form with no side effects (from the alcohol
or prservatives in wine) is exactly what we're after."
Evidence from the use of Longevinex may finally prove resveratrol's
human benefits, and the evidence for resveratrol is mounting. Investors
have already funded four new pharmaceutical companies for the sole
purpose of developing drugs to mimic natural resveratrol. The first
pharmaceutical product may be a skin cream available in the next few
years.
For the future, resveratrol and resveratrol-like drugs have the potential,
for example, to keep America's rampant obesity from being such a deadly
killer.
But for now, Sinclair says eat well and keep an eye on developments
regarding resveratrol. "There is probably nothing ever that's going
to be invented that can replace healthy diets. However, they might
work very well together, and then we would really see the best benefits."
At Harvard Medical School's new research building, said to be the
most advanced facility of its kind in the world, Dr. Sinclair and
his colleagues are advancing the limits of our knowledge about aging,
perhaps giving new meaning to the old Star Trek greeting, "Live
long and prosper."
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