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Glycerol extends lifespan of Brachionus manjavacas (Rotifera) and protects against stressors.

stress mitochondria

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#1 Soma

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Posted 10 June 2014 - 03:09 PM


I searched the forum to check if this had already been posted and didn't see it. Forgive me if it has already been discussed. I know that the fact that this was shown with rotifera almost certainly means that it is irrelevant, but I thought I'd post it anyway.



Glycerol extends lifespan of Brachionus manjavacas (Rotifera) and protects against stressors.

Abstract
Diet has profound effects on animal longevity and manipulation of nutrient sensing pathways is one of the primary interventions capable of lifespan extension. This often is done through caloric restriction (CR) and a variety of CR mimics have been identified that produce life extending effects without adhering to the rigorous CR dietary regimen. Glycerol is a dietary supplement capable mimicking CR by shifting metabolism away from glycolysis and towards oxidative phosphorylation. Glycerol supplementation has a number of beneficial effects, including lifespan extension, improved stress resistance, and enhanced locomotory and mitochondria activity in older age classes. Using rotifers as a model, we show that supplements of 150-300mM glycerol produced 40-50% extension of mean lifespan. This effect was produced by raising glycerol concentration only three times higher than its baseline concentration in rotifer tissues. Glycerol supplementation decreased rotifer reliance on glycolysis and reduced the pro-aging effects of glucose. Glycerol also acted as a chemical chaperone, mitigating damage by protein aggregation. Glycerol treatment improved rotifer swimming performance in older age classes and maintained more mitochondrial activity. Glycerol treatment provided increased resistance to starvation, heat, oxidation, and osmotic stress, but not UV stress. When glycerol was co-administered with the hexokinase inhibitor 2-deoxyglucose, the lifespan extending effect of glycerol was enhanced. Co-administration of glycerol with inhibitors like 2-deoxyglucose can lower their efficacious doses, thereby reducing their toxic side effects.

http://www.ncbi.nlm....pubmed/24835191
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#2 pone11

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Posted 11 January 2015 - 11:32 AM

Have you found any good animal studies with glycerol?   Rotifers is probably not a great model for humans, and at the levels they were dosing them it is hard to say if glycerol is acting as a supplement, or if instead they forced some calorie composition issue that had a different effect than what they thought they were measuring. 

 

This is still really interesting.   

 

Have you found a glycerol supplement you like?







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