Register  ~  Login
  Search
News Articles Archive
"News, information, and a home on the Net for people all over the world who are seeking to heal the Earth and unravel the fundamental mysteries of life."

Featured Articles
  • Important Book Summary: 'Evidence Of The Afterlife'
  • Shields Down! Earth's Magnetic Field May Drop In A Flash
  • U.S. Nuclear Plants Are Leaking Radioactive Material Linked To Cancer
  • Maine Panel Weighs Cell Phone Cancer Warning
  • Bibles-For-Porn Stunt Draws Crowd At UTSA
  • UFO Guru To Tiger Woods: 'Divorce & Enjoy Polyamory'
  • Top 10 Spooky Sleep Disorders
  • Newsweek In 1995: Why The Internet Will Fail.
  • Priest Offers Updated Version Of Ten Commandments
  • Roman Nail Used To Crucify Jesus May Have Been Found
  • Al Gore: We Can't Wish Away Climate Change
  • Chilean Quake Shifted Earth’s Axis, Shortened Length Of Days
  • Compassion For The One; Complacency For The Many
  • Men Around The World Prefer Female Hourglass Figure
  • Senator Inhofe Accused Of 'McCarthyite Witch-Hunt'
  • Documentary: The Singing Revolution
  • Monks With Guns: Discovering Buddhist Violence
  • Update: Scientology Hires Reporters To Investigate St. Petersburg Times
  • Plastic Rubbish Also Blights ATLANTIC Ocean
  • Wal-Mart Unveils Plan To Make Supply Chain Greener
  • Climate Skeptics Are Recycled, Repeatedly Debunked Critics Of Old
  • Iceberg The Size Of Luxembourg Breaks Off Antarctica Glacier
  • NASA Launches New Page On Global Warming
  • Brazil's Catholic Church Sues Filmmakers For Destroying Rio's Christ In 2012
  • Must Watch: Keith Olbermann: 'My Father Asked Me To Kill Him'
  • Brain Functions That Improve With Age
  • Singularity University’s Summer Program Doubling in Size
  • SETI Founder Wants Off-World Listening Post For Alien Messages
  • Deepak Chopra: Only Spirituality Can Solve The Problems Of The World
  • NHNE's Fire Hydrant News Feeds

  • Current Articles
  • Important Book Summary: 'Evidence Of The Afterlife'
  • Shields Down! Earth's Magnetic Field May Drop In A Flash
  • U.S. Nuclear Plants Are Leaking Radioactive Material Linked To Cancer
  • Maine Panel Weighs Cell Phone Cancer Warning
  • How Much Is A Gold Medal Really Worth?
  • Bibles-For-Porn Stunt Draws Crowd At UTSA
  • UFO Guru To Tiger Woods: 'Divorce & Enjoy Polyamory'
  • Top 10 Spooky Sleep Disorders
  • Newsweek In 1995: Why The Internet Will Fail.
  • Priest Offers Updated Version Of Ten Commandments
  • Roman Nail Used To Crucify Jesus May Have Been Found
  • Al Gore: We Can't Wish Away Climate Change
  • Chilean Quake Shifted Earth’s Axis, Shortened Length Of Days
  • Compassion For The One; Complacency For The Many
  • Men Around The World Prefer Female Hourglass Figure
  • Senator Inhofe Accused Of 'McCarthyite Witch-Hunt'
  • Documentary: The Singing Revolution
  • Monks With Guns: Discovering Buddhist Violence
  • Update: Scientology Hires Reporters To Investigate St. Petersburg Times
  • Plastic Rubbish Also Blights ATLANTIC Ocean
  • Wal-Mart Unveils Plan To Make Supply Chain Greener
  • Climate Skeptics Are Recycled, Repeatedly Debunked Critics Of Old
  • Iceberg The Size Of Luxembourg Breaks Off Antarctica Glacier
  • NASA Launches New Page On Global Warming
  • Brazil's Catholic Church Sues Filmmakers For Destroying Rio's Christ In 2012
  • Must Watch: Keith Olbermann: 'My Father Asked Me To Kill Him'
  • Brain Functions That Improve With Age
  • Singularity University’s Summer Program Doubling in Size
  • SETI Founder Wants Off-World Listening Post For Alien Messages
  • Deepak Chopra: Only Spirituality Can Solve The Problems Of The World
  • NHNE's Fire Hydrant News Feeds
  • One Of The Best Male-Female Essays Ever: 'Dear You, My Man'
  • Twitter, Facebook Use Up 82 Percent
  • Tibetan Spiritual Leader Dalai Lama Joins Twitter
  • Tonight On National Geographic: UFOs Over Phoenix
  • Scientology Hires Acclaimed Reporters To Investigate Newspaper
  • Why Americans Love The Dalai Lama
  • Sun Myung Moon Of Unification Church Turns 90
  • ResearchGATE - 'Facebook For Scientists'
  • Scientists Grapple With 'Completely Out of Hand' Attacks
  • Ice Shelves Disappearing On Antarctic Peninsula
  • 'The Cove' Wins WGA Award, Becomes First Documentary To Sweep Guild Prizes
  • Vitamin D Shrinks Cancer Cells
  • 10 Secrets Of The Vatican Exposed
  • Energy Breakthrough: The Bloom Box
  • Cyber Warriors From China, Russia, & Elsewhere
  • Torture Through The Ages
  • James Cameron Confirms He's Writing 'Avatar' Novel
  • Tiger Woods Returns To Buddhism To Turn Life Around
  • The Water Bobble: BPA-Free Water Bottle That Filters Tap Water

  • News Articles Archive

    Current Articles | Categories | Search | Syndication

    Small Doses Of Resveratrol Found To Have Large Affects

    AGENT IN RED WINE FOUND TO KEEP HEARTS YOUNG
    By Tomas Prolla
    University of Wisconsin-Madison
    June 3, 2008

    Original Link

    MADISON - How, scientists wonder, do the French get away with a clean bill of heart health despite a diet loaded with saturated fats?

    The answer to the so-called "French paradox" may be found in red wine. More specifically, it may reside in small doses of resveratrol, a natural constituent of grapes, pomegranates, red wine and other foods, according to a new study by an international team of researchers.

    Writing this week (June 3) in the online, open-access journal Public Library of Science One, the researchers report that low doses of resveratrol in the diet of middle-aged mice has a widespread influence on the genetic levers of aging and may confer special protection on the heart.

    Specifically, the researchers found that low doses of resveratrol mimic the effects of what is known as caloric restriction -- diets with 20-30 percent fewer calories than a typical diet -- that in numerous studies has been shown to extend lifespan and blunt the effects of aging.

    "This brings down the dose of resveratrol toward the consumption reality mode," says senior author Richard Weindruch, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of medicine and a researcher at the William S. Middleton Memorial Veterans Hospital. "At the same time, it plugs into the biology of caloric restriction."

    Previous research has shown that resveratrol in high doses extends lifespan in invertebrates and prevents early mortality in mice given a high-fat diet. The new study, conducted by researchers from academia and industry, extends those findings, showing that resveratrol in low doses and beginning in middle age can elicit many of the same benefits as a reduced-calorie diet.

    "Resveratrol is active in much lower doses than previously thought and mimics a significant fraction of the profile of caloric restriction at the gene expression level," says Tomas Prolla, a UW-Madison professor of genetics and a senior author of the new report.

    The group explored the influence of the agent on heart, muscle and brain by looking for changes in gene expression in those tissues. As animals age, gene expression in the different tissues of the body changes as genes are switched on and off.

    In the new study -- which compared the genetic crosstalk of animals on a restricted diet with those fed small doses of resveratrol -- the similarities were remarkable, explains lead author Jamie Barger of Madison-based LifeGen Technologies. In the heart, for example, there are at least 1,029 genes whose functions change with age, and the organ's function is known to diminish with age. In animals on a restricted diet, 90 percent of those heart genes experienced altered gene expression profiles, while low doses of resveratrol thwarted age-related change in 92 percent. The new findings, say the study's authors, were associated with prevention of the decline in heart function associated with aging.

    In short, a glass of wine or food or supplements that contain even small doses of resveratrol are likely to represent "a robust intervention in the retardation of cardiac aging," the authors note.

    That finding may also explain the remarkable heart health of people who live in some regions of France where diets are soaked in saturated fats but the incidence of heart disease, a major cause of mortality in the United States, is low. In France, meals are traditionally complemented with a glass of red wine.

    The new resveratrol study is also important because it suggests that caloric restriction, which has been widely studied in animals from spiders to humans, and resveratrol may govern the same master genetic pathways related to aging.

    "There must be a few master biochemical pathways activated in response to caloric restriction, which in turn activate many other pathways," explains Prolla. "And resveratrol seems to activate some of these master pathways as well."

    The new findings, according to Weindruch and Prolla, provide strong evidence that resveratrol can improve quality of life through its influence on the different parameters of aging such as cardiac function. However, whether the agent can extend lifespan in ways similar to caloric restriction will require further study, according to the new report's authors.

    ...........

    The work of the Wisconsin team was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health and DSM Nutritional Products of Basel, Switzerland.

    Tomas Prolla
    taprolla@wisc.edu
    608-265-5204

    Terry Devitt
    trdevitt@wisc.edu
    608-262-8282

    CONTACT: Tomas Prolla, (608) 265-5204, (608) 556-0175 (cell), taprolla@wisc.edu; Richard Weindruch (608) 256-1901 ext. 11642, (608) 556-0176 (cell), rhweindr@wisc.edu

    .............

    NHNE On Aging & Anti-Aging

    posted @ Wednesday, June 04, 2008 11:57 PM by sunfellow

    Previous Page | Next Page

    COMMENTS

      

    ............

    In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Unless the information in question has been written and/or published by NHNE, NHNE has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article. NHNE is, therefore, not endorsed or sponsored by the originator, nor does NHNE necessarily endorse, promote, or agree with the content. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.