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Molecules Discovered That Extend L


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#1 chubtoad

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Posted 25 August 2003 - 05:51 PM


Molecules Discovered That Extend Life In Yeast
www.sciencedaily.com
Source: Harvard Medical School
Date: 2003-08-25



Molecules Discovered That Extend Life In Yeast, Human Cells; Group Of Compounds Found In Red Wine, Vegetables Simulate Benefit Of Low-calorie Diet

BOSTON, MA – Mice, rats, worms, flies, and yeast all live longer on a low-calorie diet, which also seems to protect mammals against cancer and other aging-related diseases. Now, in yeast cells, researchers at Harvard Medical School and BIOMOL Research Laboratories have for the first time found a way to duplicate the benefits of restricted calories in yeast with a group of compounds found in red wine and vegetables. One compound extended yeast life span by up to 80 percent. The molecules are also active in human cells cultured in the laboratory.

The findings are reported in the August 24 Nature advanced online edition. The research suggests a promising route to find and develop drugs to lengthen life and prevent or treat aging-related diseases.

The molecules belong to a familiar group of compounds known as polyphenols, such as the resveratrol found in red wine and the flavones found in olive oil. For these particular polyphenols, the beneficial effects seem to be independent of their famed antioxidant properties. Instead, the molecules activate sirtuins, a family of enzymes known to extend the life span of yeast and tiny lab round worms. In screening tests, the researchers found 17 molecules that stimulated SIRT1, one of seven human sirtuins, and the yeast sirtuin SIR2.

"We think sirtuins buy cells time to repair damage," said molecular biologist David Sinclair, assistant professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School and co-author of the new study. "There is a growing realization from the aging field that blocking cell death -- as long as it doesn't lead to cancer -- extends life span."

"The sirtuin stimulation provided by certain, but not all, polyphenols may be a far more important biological effect than their antioxidant action," said co-author Konrad Howitz, director of molecular biology at BIOMOL, a biochemical reagents company in Pennsylvania.

Calorie restriction (in mammals, reducing intake to 60 or 70 percent of the normal daily calories) may be one of many mild stresses that trigger beneficial effects, a phenomenon called hormesis. To explain their new findings, the researchers propose that plant polyphenols, which increase in response to stressful conditions, cue organisms to prepare for impending harsh conditions by switching to a more beneficial survival program. They call their hypothesis "xenohormesis."

The most potent molecule in the study, resveratrol, helped yeast cells live as much as 60 to 80 percent longer, as measured by the number of generations. Other studies have linked resveratrol to health benefits in mitigating age-related diseases, including neurodegeneration, cancer and clogged arteries. In this study, researchers were surprised to find that yeast cells treated with small doses of resveratrol lived for an average of 38 generations, compared to 19 for the untreated yeast. The polyphenol worked through a known sirtuin molecular pathway to help yeast and human cells survive environmental stresses.

In experiments with human cells, resveratrol activated a similar pathway requiring SIRT1. This enabled 30 percent of the treated human cells to survive gamma radiation compared to 10 percent of untreated cells. Little is known about the human sirtuin SIRT1, except that it turns off the tumor suppressor gene p53. This raises the concern that any promotion of this pathway might promote cancer even as it switches on a longevity program. But Sinclair said that calorie-restricted animals in experiments by others have lower, not higher rates of cancer.

In the paper, the researchers report that preliminary experiments in flies and worms are encouraging. Mouse studies are in the works. They are exploring synthetic variations on the molecules, which they call sirtuin activating compounds or "STACs," to improve the sirtuin activity. They are also searching for endogenous activators that may naturally exist in human cells.

In the May 8 Nature, Sinclair's research group reported the first known genetic link between environmental stresses and longer life in yeast. Triggered by low salt, heat, or calorie restriction (to as low as 25 percent of normal), a yeast "longevity gene" stimulated Sir2 activity. Sinclair and his colleagues are testing equivalent genes in humans to see if they similarly speed up human sirtuin activity.

The work was supported by the National Institute on Aging and the Harvard-Armenise Foundation. Researchers were further supported by fellowships and training grants from the Ellison Medical Research Foundation, the American Federation for Aging Research, the National Eye Institute, and the National Science Foundation. A provisional patent has been filed for refined versions of the natural molecules.


Edited by chubtoad, 03 May 2004 - 03:56 AM.


#2 Lazarus Long

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Posted 25 August 2003 - 06:40 PM

This makes three times in as many days we have referenced the same study independently of one another. Kevin would you do the honors of combining them?

I will later if I get a chance. Chubtoad it was good of you to post this and it is relevant but it is now also a little redundant, though it does go well with a Cabernet.
:))

Checkout:

http://www.imminst.o...t=0

and

http://www.imminst.o...t=0

#3 Bruce Klein

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Posted 25 August 2003 - 07:20 PM

If we can make Immortality News the forum to post these kinds of articles as a 'new topics'...


If an article like this is posted under an existing topic.. there's probably no real reason to combine, you think?

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#4 kevin

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Posted 25 August 2003 - 07:43 PM

Redundant News Posts:

I think that,

1) Perhaps a higher visibility of the "Immortality News" forum button, maybe to go along with "Active Topics". This would begin a formalization of of News vs Discussion. Is there an advantage to drawing a clearer line in the minds of visitors. I think the news is a one-stop resource for a lot of people and will be a popular place to gather information.

2) Pin posting guidelines in the forum which can be something like...
a) Check that the article isn't already represented and don't post identical articles.
b) Read any similar posts and determine if the one you wish to post has enough new material or different perspective to warrant posting it.

Maybe a format could be suggested to aid in future programmatic searches.

Line 1) Link/URL
Line 2) Date of Publication
Line 3) Source of Publication
Line 4) Author
----------------------
Followed by the body.. perhaps a bit premature to begin dictating format... maybe a submission page would help?

make sense?... thoughts.. ?

#5 Bruce Klein

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Posted 25 August 2003 - 07:49 PM

Excellent Ideas.. I'm working on a whole rework of links and site.. shall keep this in mind.. Thanks Kev.

#6 JonesGuy

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Posted 25 August 2003 - 08:40 PM

Just a note to everybody, some news sources are paid according to the number of "hits" their stories generate.

By clicking on the links provided, you give the appearance that the "life extension" articles are popular. The more popular they are, the more the news-sources will print those kinds of stories.

The more of those stories people see/read, the more the concept of life extension will appeal to people.

#7 Bruce Klein

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Posted 25 August 2003 - 08:48 PM

Thanks QJones, good point.

#8 Lazarus Long

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Posted 25 August 2003 - 08:59 PM

Can we assure the links will remain viable and make it so a new window opens regardless of how the person's browser is configured?

I like your ideas Kevin and as a general rule I already apply the principle for how I repost articles because I try to always include a link to the original as well as the rest of the info and recommend that people go and look because often the links to other research on those pages is invaluable. It creates a logical sequence or a daisy-chain for study.

By the way check out this related article, the wine is supposed to be a bumper crop this year. [lol]

http://story.news.ya...vestahotvintage

French Winemakers Harvest a Hot Vintage
Sun Aug 24, 2:55 PM ET The New York Times
By CRAIG S. SMITH The New York Times

PARIS, Aug. 23 The blazingly hot summer has been brutal on Europe, particularly its elderly, but it may leave a more positive legacy behind vineyards are hauling in their most promising crop in years.

Vintners are busy with an early vendange, the annual grape harvest that normally does not start until mid-September. As a rule, hot summers and early harvests produce great wines, winemakers say.

"It is the earliest harvest since 1893," said Bernard Hervet, who runs Bouchard Père et Fils in Burgundy. Mr. Hervet said that his vineyards began harvesting grapes for its Beaune-Grèves Vigne de l'Enfant Jésus wine this week and that he expected to start harvesting farther north in Chablis on Aug. 25, the earliest date for that region on record.




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