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Red wine may protect heart from aging’s toll 6-3-08
WASHINGTON - A natural compound found in red wine may protect the heart
against the effects of the aging process, researchers said on Tuesday.
In their study, mice were given a diet supplemented with the compound known as
resveratrol starting at their equivalent of middle age until old age.
These mice experienced changes in their gene activity related to aging in a way
very similar to mice that were placed on a so-called calorie restriction diet
that slows the aging process by greatly cutting dietary energy intake.
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Most striking was how the resveratrol, like calorie restriction, blocked the
decline in heart function typically associated with aging, according to Tomas
Prolla, a University of Wisconsin professor of genetics who helped lead the
study.
Scientists seek fountain of youth
Much as Spaniard Juan Ponce de Leon once searched for the mythical fountain of
youth, researchers now are seeking ways to extend the quality and length of
human life.
In some studies, animals given a diet with greatly reduced caloric intake have
lived longer than animals with normal diets. But perpetual hunger is a steep
price to pay for greater longevity, some researchers say.
Resveratrol, found in abundance in grapes and in red wine, has drawn a lot of
interest from scientists and some companies, including GlaxoSmithKline, which in
April said it would pay $720 million to buy Sirtris Pharmaceuticals Inc, a
company that is developing drugs that mimic the effects of resveratrol.
Some studies have shown that in high doses, resveratrol extended the life span
of fruit flies and worms and prevented early death in mice fed a high-fat diet.
In this study, mice were given relatively low doses compared to the earlier
research, and still experienced important aging-related benefits, the
researchers said.
The researchers began giving the resveratrol diet to the mice when they were 14
months old — their middle age — and followed the animals until they were about
30 months old. The researchers then conducted tests on cardiac function and on
gene activity related to aging.
“Resveratrol at low doses can retard some aspects of the aging process,
including heart aging, and it may do so by mimicking some of the effects of
caloric restriction, which is known to retard aging in several tissues and
extend life span,” added Prolla, whose study was published in the scientific
journal PLoS ONE.
Using a method that permits simultaneous analysis of thousands of genes at the
same time, the researchers found a huge overlap in the genes whose activity were
changed by resveratrol and caloric restriction.
They looked at the heart, brain and muscles, and said that the effect of
resveratrol was strongest in the heart but did prevent some aging-related
changes in the other tissues.
Just because mice had these benefits does not mean people also would, although
Prolla said, “I think there’s a high likelihood that our findings are applicable
to humans.”
He said he expected to see a lot of studies in the coming years on the effects
of resveratrol supplementation in people.
Some funding for the study came from DSM Nutritional Products, a company based
in Basel, Switzerland that produces a resveratrol product called Resvida.
Madison, Wisconsin-based LifeGen Technologies, a genomics company that Prolla
helped found, took part in the research.
Comment:
Nothing in a pill will ever be as healthy as taken in the natural form.
Studies have also shown that red grape juice has just as much resveratrol as
wine.
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