Fig. 3: Mean lifespan of StemCell 100 treated and
control flies
Fig. 4: Lifespan of last 5% survivors using
StemCell 100 treated and control flies
Needless to say, there is a gold rush on to put together protocols
that stimulate natural stem cell production and also restore
telemeres. All these are meant to lead to healthier and perhaps
younger cells. This reports tracks some of it and is helpful. It is
though early days all the way around.
Yet as this suggests, it is not too soon to dabble. The herbal brew
suggested here can also be easily assembled or acquired from the
vender. Even taking them separately may be sound practice.
We will continue to follow this story which is emerging strongly over
the past two years. We are a ways off from a hard and fast system
yet, but this is the true future of medicine.
Stem Cell 100 plus -
herbal Nutraceuticals
JUNE 12, 2014
http://nextbigfuture.com/2014/06/stem-cell-100-plus-herbal-nutraceuticals.html
In 2011, Hplus
Magazine had detailed coverage on Genescient (life extension company)
and the Stem Cell 100 product
I started taking Stem Cell 100 back in 2011. It is about $60 for a one month supply. There is now Stem Cell 100+ [$75 for a one month supply]. They added more ingredients and the testimonials are that it acts faster and is more powerful and more people have noticeable positive changes.
I would also recommend supporting SENS rejuvenation research and Robert Freitas's nanomedicine work (donate through IMM)
Genescient's primary
business focus is on the development of pharmaceuticals for
age-related diseases, but in conjunction with its spinoff firm Life
Code LLC, it has provided testing services for the development of
nutraceuticals based on its unique genomics platform. Our findings
can be summarized as follows:
1. Aging is linked to altered expression in more than a hundred genes;
2. We employed artificial intelligence algorithms combined with animal longevity assays to screen for wide-spectrum herbal extracts that extend lifespan;
3. We succeeded in doubling animal lifespan using a novel class of nutrigenomic supplements that modulate genes involved in both aging and age-related disease.
Fine-Tuning Your
Longevity Genes
· January 23, 2011
- AUTHOR: BRYAN VILLEPONTEAU
http://hplusmagazine.com/2011/01/23/fine-tuning-your-longevity-genes/
The nearly universal
human desire to preserve youth can often motivate people to make
major lifestyle changes or try the latest wonder supplement.
But is it really possible to slow the rate of aging with current
knowledge and technology? I argue herein that aging can be
dramatically slowed by fine-tuning your longevity genes. Indeed,
scientific research carried out in the last 20 years has shown that
lifespan can be readily modulated by a variety of genetic or dietary
strategies.
In this article, I
describe our efforts at Genescient LLC in Irvine, CA to
develop strategies to delay aging and age-related disease.
Genescient's primary business focus is on the development of
pharmaceuticals for age-related diseases, but in conjunction with its
spinoff firm Life Code LLC, it has provided testing services for
the development of nutraceuticals based on its unique genomics
platform. Our findings can be summarized as follows:
- Aging is linked to altered expression in more than a hundred genes;
- We employed artificial intelligence algorithms combined with animal longevity assays to screen for wide-spectrum herbal extracts that extend lifespan;
- We succeeded in doubling animal lifespan using a novel class of nutrigenomic supplements that modulate genes involved in both aging and age-related disease.
What Are the Main
Effects of Aging?
Fig. 1: Aging causes
an exponential increase in the annual mortality rate.
The actual decline in
function with age occur at the cell, organ, and systemic levels, but
the impacts of this decline can differ with the individual’s genes
and environment. The net result of aging in an animal population is a
progressive increase in all-cause mortality and morbidity. In the
case of humans, all-cause mortality is known to double every
eight years after sexual maturity until it reaches an annual
mortality rate plateau of about 50% over 105 years of age.
All grafted data under
110 years are from the Social Security Administration Death Master
File, while data on 110 to 119 year olds are from validated human
super-centenarians from the website www.grg.org.
Why Do We Age?
All life forms on
earth have evolved through natural selection, which selects the best
genotype for fitness in a particular ecological niche. In 1952 the
British Nobel zoologist Peter Medawar proposed that aging is the
simple result of the failure of natural selection to maintain fitness
in older animals with declining fertility. As fertility wanes,
then the chances to correct inappropriate gene expression via natural
selection also decline, generating the aging phenotype. Thus,
according to Medawar’s hypothesis, aging is indirectly caused
by the declining forces of natural selection to select the best
fitness genes for the aged animal as reproductive capacity
declines. In 1957, George Williams further developed Medawar’s
evolutionary theory of aging by introducing the concept
ofantagonistic pleiotropy, wherein a gene may promote fitness in
young fertile animals (and thus be selected for) but become a
liability late in life leading to a subsequent decline in fitness.
Modern versions of Medawar’s and William’s evolutionary theories
of aging are still widely believed today by most experts in aging
science, as the theory fits well with the immense body of literature
showing that natural selection is responsible for virtually all of
the phenotypes present in the diverse species observed in Nature.
Evolution appears to evolve a life history for each species that is
best adapted to its ecological niche.
Besides its sound
theoretical basis in the well-known mechanisms of natural selection,
the Evolution Theory of Aging has also been directly tested
in Drosophila melanogasterby Michael Rose (UCI Professor and
cofounder of Genescient). If the Evolution Theory of Aging is
correct, Dr. Rose predicted that he should be able to select
populations of long-lived animals by simply selecting for
reproductive longevity. To carry out his longevity experiment,
Dr. Rose started with 5 lines of wild type Drosophila flies
and selected for reproductive longevity over a 27-year period.
Dr. Rose finally obtained robust Methuselah flies with a
demonstrated lifespan of some 3 to 4 times that found in the
non-selected control lines, while retaining fertility and sexual
vitality. Genescient has carried out several independent experiments
to verify that these Methuselah flies are indeed long lived compared
to wild type flies. As Genescient’s VP of R&D, I
carefully monitored the most recent comparative lifespan experiment
done in 2010 (Fig. 2). The Methuselah flies (O populations) far
outlive their unselected wild type fly B populations. The
selected Methuselah O flies have some 3 or 4 times longer mean
lifespan than the non-selected wild type B flies (Fig. 2). This
selection experiment is a dramatic verification that evolution
modulates the aging process.
Fig. 2:
Breeding Drosophila for late reproduction leads to much
longer lived flies. The result is as predicted by the Evolution
Theory of Aging.
Studying gene
expression in the wild type and Methuselah flies, Genescient has
shown that several hundred genes have an altered expression in the
Methuselah flies. In late 2010, Genescient sequenced the DNA of
the wild type and Methuselah flies and again found that more
than a hundred genes appear to be altered in the long-lived
Methuselah flies.
These experimental
results are fully consistent with the Evolution Theory of Aging,
which predicts that aging leads to poorly functioning organisms as
natural selection for optimal gene function wanes with age. In
summary, we age because of the declining force of natural selection
in adult life, which leads to unfit gene expression with age.
Developing
Nutraceuticals That Can Extend Mean and Maximum Lifespan
If there are hundreds
of genes that function poorly as we age, then one possible anti-aging
strategy is to utilize wide-spectrum nutraceuticals to modify
gene expression to a state consistent with greater longevity.
Note that the ideal gene expression pattern is not
identical to youthful gene expression, as some of the youthful gene
expression is inconsistent with longevity (e.g. genes
promoting rapid growth that can lead to cancer).
To develop potential
wide-spectrum antiaging nutraceuticals, Genescient initially set out
to identify nutraceutical compounds that would target as many of the
complementary longevity pathways as possible and thereby
extend Drosophila lifespan. Unfortunately, none of the
single compound nutraceuticals tested appeared to significantly
extend fly lifespan in our longevity screens. The typically poor
longevity effects of single compounds argue against the use of
drug-like therapeutics directed to a single target for longevity
treatments.
At this point, I
decided to test mixtures of medicinal herbal extracts, as these have
had a long history of success in Chinese and Indian traditional
medicine and are known to have a wide spectrum of positive effects in
humans. To affect as many longevity genes as
possible, I focused on complementary herbal extracts that have
antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and metabolic potential (known
factors in driving aging) along with a positive effect on longevity
genes and a proven history of use in traditional herbal medicine to
treat a wide spectrum of diseases.
In selecting a group
of herbal extracts, I did not take the traditional route of choosing
an existing herbal mixture or the normal scientific route of choosing
a mix of herbal extracts that target a particular disease or target.
While there are many claims that a particular herbal extract is
“anti-aging”, I found that these claims were too anecdotal to be
believed. The screen for herbal extracts I used was novel in
several ways. First, I tried to identify the best
wide-spectrum herb in Chinese, Indian, or Western medicine based on
its long term traditional use and data indicating that the herbal
extract can target multiple longevity genes identified by Genescient
or by other research groups.
In Chinese traditional
medicine, Astragalus membranaceus (Huang Qi) appeared
to be the best Chinese herb because of its many traditional uses and
recent studies demonstrating stem cell activation and inhibition of
mTOR. The mTOR inhibition has extended mouse mean lifespan
by 33%. In traditional Chinese medicine astragalus
is considered a true tonic that can strengthen debilitated patients
and increase resistance to disease in general. Modern
herbal treatments with Astragalus membranaceus root (often
in concert with other herbs) are partly based on clinical trials
showing benefits in strengthening immune function during viral (e.g.
chronic hepatitis) or bacterial infection or in those individuals
undergoing dialysis for kidney failure. Clinical trials at the
US National Cancer Institute and other world centers have indicated
that Astragalus can strengthen immunity and improve survival in some
individuals with cancer. In western herbal medicine, Astragalus
root is used to enhance immunity and to help in wound healing.
Astragalus compounds have also been shown to stimulate stem cells,
promote peripheral nerve regeneration in rats, and inhibit mTOR (a
major longevity gene shown by extensive government studies to extend
lifespan in mice).
In looking for the
best herb in the Indian Ayurvedic medicinal tradition, I soon focused
on the potent anti-diabetic herb, Pterocarpus
marsupium. Crude extracts of Pterocarpus marsupium (Indian
keno tree) bark naturally have high concentrations
of pterostilbene(more than 4% by weight and extraction can get
this level much higher) and have been used as a traditional herbal
treatment for diabetes in India for thousands of years. More
recent studies in animals show potent anti-diabetic activity.
Published studies have also shown that pterostilbene is a potent
anticancer compound. For example, pterostilbene, an analog
of resveratrol, has dose-dependent anticancer activity in five
cancer cell lines. As expected, pterostilbene is known to
affect most or all of the longevity genes targeted by resveratrol,
but has far greater stability and efficacy.
As an herbal
medicine, Pterocarpus marsupium is popular in India for its
diverse health benefits. Besides diabetes, the herb is
also reported to cure a wide spectrum of ailments like skin diseases,
fractures, bruises, constipation, hemorrhages, and rheumatoid
arthritis. These diverse health benefits of Pterocarpus
marsupium make it a clear favorite to include in a preventive
herbal cocktail along with Astragalus.
Having selected two of
the biggest stars in the traditional herbal medicines of China and
India, I looked for an effective herb with wide-spectrum health
effects from the Western herbal tradition. In this case, pine
bark proanthocyanidins stand out as the best wide-spectrum
herbal extracts in the Western herbal medicine tradition.
Proanthocyanidins are polymer chains of flavonoids (flavan-3-ols)
that were discovered by Jacques Masquelier in 1948 and have been a
major therapeutic supplement in Europe since the 1980s. Most
of the research and commercial success with proanthocyanidins has
come from extracts of a French maritime pine bark
calledPycnogenol (65 to 75% proanthocyanidins) and various grape
seed extracts (80-90% proanthocyanidins).
One interesting claim
of health benefits from proanthocyanidins is the hypothesis that they
are responsible for the “French Paradox”, wherein the French tend
to have much reduced rates of cardiovascular disease compared to
other Western countries on a high-fat diet because of their high
intake of red wine made with grapes. Besides their
cardiovascular effects, Oligo-Proanthocyanidins (OPCs as attached
units of proanthocyanidins are called) are known to have many other
health benefits. For example, OPCs stabilize collagen and
elastin, which are two essential proteins in connective tissues from
blood vessels, muscles, and skin. OPCs are reported to reduce
genetic mutations, so they have some anticancer benefits. OPCs
have also been shown in clinical trials to promote blood flow and
endothelial nitric oxide while reducing edema, capillary fragility,
and damage from pollution, toxins, and cigarette smoke. These
diverse health benefits make Pine Bark proanthocyanidins another
perfect candidate to combine with wide-spectrum herbal extracts
from Astragalus membranaceus and Pterocarpus
marsupium bark.
To round out the above
herbs, I wanted an herbal compound that provided neural protection in
the brain. L-theanine (also known as
gamma-glutamylethylamide, or 5-N-ethyl-glutamine) is an uncommon
amino acid found preferentially in green tea. Theanine
is an analog of glutamine and glutamate and can cross the blood-brain
barrier to directly affect the brain. Among its psychoactive
properties, theanine is reported to reduce mental stress and improved
cognition and mood via its binding to the GABA brain receptors in the
parasympathetic nervous system. Thus, theanine
appears to increase the overall level of the brain inhibitory
transmitter GABA and is reported to promote alpha wave production in
the brain. Theanine also increases brain dopamine
concentrations and has significant affinities for the AMPA and NMDA
receptors. The NMDA receptors help control memory and synaptic
plasticity. Theanine may also have positive effects on
serotonin levels to promote restful sleep. In rats, theanine is
neuroprotective. All of these neuroprotective properties of
L-theanine make it a strong complementary addition to the three
essential core herbs of the herbal mix. We named the final
4-herb mix StemCell 100, because of its positive effects on
adult stem cells and have filed a patent application on this
wide-spectrum nutraceutical.
Drosophila Longevity
Studies Using Treatment with StemCell 100
The current StemCell
100 herbal blend has gone through extensive longevity testing
with Drosophila fruit flies. The Drosophila longevity
study (see Figs 3 and 4 below) included three cages of fruit
flies that were treated with StemCell 100 (T1 to
T3) and three cages that were untreated controls (C1
to C3). Each cage started with 500 fruit flies including 250
males and 250 females. The experiment showed that
mean lifespan more than doubled with a 123% increase.
That would be like the average human living to 167 years of
age! While fruit flies are not people, they are more like us
than you might think. Drosophila has a heart and
circulatory system, and the most common cause of death is heart
failure. Like humans and other mammals (e.g. mice), it is quite
difficult to increase their lifespan significantly. The
doubling of mean lifespan by StemCell 100 outperforms every lifespan
enhancing treatment ever tested in flies – including experiments
using genetic modification and dietary restriction.
Fig. 3: Mean lifespan
of StemCell 100 treated and control flies
The longest living
fruit fly receiving StemCell 100 lived 89 days compared to the
longest living untreated control which lived 48 days. That
is an increase in maximum lifespan of 85% which is the equivalent of
a person living to be 191 years old! It is possible that the
single longest living fruit fly lived longer for other reasons such
as genetic mutation; however, there were many others that lived
almost as long so it was not just an aberration. For example,
the oldest 5% of the treated fruit flies lived 77% longer than the
oldest 5% of the control group (see Fig. 4 below).
Fig. 4: Lifespan of
last 5% survivors using StemCell 100 treated and control flies
Pilot Field Trial on
Human Volunteers
A small clinical field
trial with six healthy individuals was run using StemCell 100 for a
period of four months (Fig. 5). The average HDL (good
cholesterol) gain with treatment was 11.4 mg/dL or 25%.
Fig. 5: StemCell
100 Field Trial:
Blood tests were
performed before and after treatment with StemCell 100 to see if the
treatment changed cholesterol or other blood chemistry profiles.
Liver function and blood chemistry were the same before and after
treatment in all participants, but there were small reductions in
total cholesterol and LDL (bad-cholesterol) with the herbal
treatment. The biggest surprise was the relatively large
increases in HDL (good cholesterol) in all 6 test subjects – even
the three individuals that were on statins (participants 1*, 2*, and
5*) showed large increase in HDL cholesterol.
We also checked four
individuals before and after StemCell 100 treatment for changes in
blood pressure (Fig. 6). There was a relatively large reduction
in systolic and diastolic blood pressure. The average Systolic
BP (red) dropped 12 mm of Hg with treatment, while the average
Diastolic BP (blue) dropped 10 mm of Hg. High
HDL cholesterol and reduced blood pressure are independent indicators
of longevity, so these results suggest that the StemCell 100 may
reduce all-cause mortality in humans, as is the case for Drosophila.
Fig. 6: Blood Pressure
Changes:
Four of the 6 above
field trial participants also were checked for changes in systolic
and diastolic blood pressure after treatment with StemCell 100.
The observed reductions with StemCell 100 are similar to those found
with anti-hypertensive proscription drugs such as the ACE inhibitors.
Conclusion
Genescient used
genomic studies in Drosophila to determine that aging is
modulated by over a hundred genes. We then used animal
longevity assays to screen fornutrigenomic supplements that
extend lifespan. We succeeded in doubling Drosophilalifespan
using a novel class of wide-spectrum herbal supplements that
modulate genes involved in both aging and age-related disease.
The doubling of mean lifespan by StemCell 100 outperforms every
lifespan enhancing treatment ever tested inDrosophila –
including experiments using genetic modification and dietary
restriction. With this successful demonstration of the power of
Genescient’s genomic R & D system, Genescient’s
proprietary genomic techniques can now be applied to developing
wide-spectrum drug combinations for the age-related diseases.
To market StemCell
100, Genescient entered a joint venture with Centagen. (a
co-creator of the StemCell 100 formulation) to form Life Code
LLC. Genescient and Centagen have spent two years in extensive
animal and human testing to optimize the herbal formulation in
StemCell 100. The dosage and quality of the individual
components emerged as critical factors in providing safety and
efficacy. With the development complete, StemCell 100 is now
available. [http://www.lifecoderx.com/ ]
While the four herbal
extracts in StemCell 100 formulation have tremendous synergistic
properties when properly manufactured in the optimized formulation,
each of the four herbal extracts in StemCell 100 – when taken
separately – have exceptional records in promoting animal and human
health. For example, the individual components of
StemCell 100 help support:
- Adult stem cell rejuvenation [1-4].
- A healthy cardiovascular system [5-8].
- Healthy blood glucose levels for those already in the normal range [9-13].
- Healthy blood pressure levels for those already in the normal range [14-15].
- Healthy cholesterol levels for those already in the normal range [9, 16-15].
- Younger looking skin [18-24].
- Better learning and focus [25-30].
- More endurance with vigorous exercise [31-35].
- A healthy immune system [31-32, 36-39].
- Healthy breasts, colon, pancreas, and prostate [40-46].
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