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Red
Wine Molecule Shown to Extend Life
Excerpt
By Greg Frost, Reuters Health
Researchers
have known for years that cutting calories can prolong life in
everything from yeast cells to mammals. But an easier way to live
longer may be as simple as turning a corkscrew.
Molecules found in red wine, peanuts
and other products of the plant world have for the first time
been shown to mimic the life-extending effects of calorie restriction,
a finding that could help researchers develop drugs that lengthen
life and prevent or treat aging-related diseases.
Researchers said on Sunday that
one of the molecules, a compound known as resveratrol, was shown
in a study to extend the life span of yeast cells by up to 80
percent. Resveratrol exists naturally in grapes and red wine.
David Sinclair, an assistant professor
of pathology at Harvard Medical School and co-author of the study,
said he and his fellow researchers hope the molecules will prove
to prolong life not just in yeast but in multi-cellular organisms
like worms, fruit flies and, perhaps, humans.
Sinclair, whose study appears in
Sunday's advanced online edition of the journal Nature, said tests
on worms and flies were already yielding "encouraging" results.
"I can't say any more because I
will scoop my next two publications," he said, adding that similar
trials were already being planned on mice.
"ENTHUSIASTIC" OVER RED WINE
Sinclair said he has become more
"enthusiastic" about the purported health benefits of red wine
since his research began, and that experts who have reviewed his
findings have had a similar response.
"Not many people know about it
yet, but those who do have almost invariably changed their drinking
habits, that is, they drink more red wine," he told Reuters.
The molecules that were shown to
extend life in yeast belong to a family of compounds known as
polyphenols. These include resveratrol, which is already thought
to make red wine healthy in moderate amounts.
Sinclair said the latest study
may help explain why moderate consumption of red wine has been
linked to lower incidence of heart disease and why resveratrol
prevents cancer in mice.
"We're connecting many dots with
this study," he said.
Scientists have known for decades
that putting organisms on a calorie-restricted diet dramatically
reduces the incidence of age-related illnesses such as cancer,
osteoporosis and heart disease.
In the 1990s, research showed that
single genes can control how fast organisms age. Because of that,
scientists have been racing to find ways of manipulating those
genes.
Sinclair and his team have been
looking for what he calls the Holy Grail of aging research: molecules
that activate the enzymes that in turn influence the genes that
regulate aging.
Now, they say, they have found
those molecules.
Sinclair's team partnered with
BIOMOL, a Pennsylvania company, to screen thousands of molecules
to see which ones might activate the enzymes.
Not only did they find a group
of 18 molecules that fit the bill -- resveratrol being just one
-- but all of them came from plants and were produced in response
to harsh environmental conditions like drought.
"We think we know why these plants
make these molecules. We think it's part of their own defense
response, and we also believe that animals and fungi that live
on the plants can pick up on these clues," he said.
To illustrate that theory, Sinclair
noted that red wines from regions with harsher growing conditions
-- Spain, Chile, Argentina and Australia -- contain more resveratrol
than those produced where grapes are not highly stressed or dehydrated.
Reference
Source 89
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