Harvard
Medical School Study:
Red Wine Extract
Key to Longer Life!
Is there really a magic bullet in the search for a legitimate anti-aging answer? Researchers at the Harvard Medical School and
the National Institute on Aging report that a natural substance
found in red wine, known as resveratrol, offsets the bad
effects of a high-calorie diet in mice and significantly extends
their lifespan. Their report,
published online recently in
Nature, implies that very large
daily doses of resveratrol could
offset the unhealthy, high-calorie
diet thought to underlie the rising
toll of obesity in the United
States and elsewhere, if people
respond to the drug as mice do.
Resveratrol is found in the skin
of grapes and in red wine and is
conjectured to be a partial explanation
for the French paradox,
the puzzling fact that people in
France enjoy a high-fat diet yet suffer less heart disease than
Americans.
The researchers fed one group of mice a diet in which 60 percent
of calories came from fat. The diet started when the
mice, all males, were a year old, which is middle-aged in
mouse terms. As expected, the mice soon developed signs of
impending diabetes, with grossly enlarged livers, and started
to die much sooner than mice fed a standard diet.
Another group of mice was fed the identical high-fat diet but
with a large daily dose of resveratrol (far larger than a human
could get from drinking wine). The resveratrol did not stop
them from putting on weight and growing as tubby as the
other fat-eating mice, but it averted the high levels of glucose
and insulin in the bloodstream, which are warning signs of
diabetes, and it kept the mice's livers at normal size.
Even more striking, the substance sharply extended the mice's
lifetimes. Those fed resveratrol along with the high- fat diet
died many months later than the mice on high fat alone, and
at the same rate as mice on a standard healthy diet. They had
all the pleasures of gluttony but paid none of the price.
Scientists have long known that a moderate intake of alcohol
and red wine in particular, is associated with a lowered risk of heart disease and other benefits. More recently, scientists
began to suspect resveratrol had particularly powerful effects
and began investigating its role in lifespan.
The researchers led by David Sinclair and Joseph Baur at the
Harvard Medical School and by Rafael de Cabo at the
National Institute on Aging, also
tried to estimate the effect of
resveratrol on the mice's physical
quality of life. They gauged how
well the mice could walk along a
rotating rod before falling off, a
test of their motor skills. The
mice on resveratrol did better as
they grew older, ending up with
much the same staying power on
the rod as mice fed a normal
diet.
The researchers hope their findings
will have relevance to people
too. Their study shows, they conclude, that orally taken drugs
"at doses achievable in humans can safely reduce many of the
negative consequences of excess caloric intake, with an overall
improvement in health and survival."
Several experts said that people wondering if they should take
resveratrol should wait until more results were in, particularly
from safety tests in humans. Another caution is that the
theory about why resveratrol works is still unproved.
"It's a pretty exciting area, but these are early days," said Dr.
Ronald Kahn, president of the Joslin Diabetes Center in
Boston.
Information about resveratrol's effects on human metabolism
should be available in a year or so, Dr. Kahn said, adding,
"Have another glass of pinot noir — that's as far as I'd take it
right now."
The mice were fed a hefty dose of resveratrol, 24 milligrams
per kilogram of body weight. Red wine has about 1.5 to 3
milligrams of resveratrol per liter, so a 150-lb person would
need to drink 750 to 1,500 bottles of red wine a day to get
such a dose.
Dr. Sinclair, the chief author of the study, has long been taking
resveratrol (red wine extract supplement). "Mice given that amount in a second feeding trial have shown similar, but
less pronounced, results as those on the 24-milligram-a-day
dose," he said (Revatrol has 400MG of red wine extract).
Dr. Sinclair has had a physician check his metabolism,
because many resveratrol preparations contain possibly hazardous
impurities, but so far, no ill effects have come to light.
His wife, his parents, and "half my lab" are also taking resveratrol,
he said.
Dr. Sinclair is the founder of a company,
Sirtris Pharmaceuticals, which has
developed several chemicals intended
to mimic the role of resveratrol but at
much lower doses. Sirtris has begun
clinical trials of one of these compounds,
an improved version of resveratrol,
with the aim of seeing if it helps
control glucose levels in people with
diabetes.
"We believe you cannot reach therapeutic
levels in man with ordinary
resveratrol," said Dr. Christoph
Westphal, the company's chief executive.
Behind the resveratrol test is a considerable
degree of scientific theory, some of
it well established and some yet to be
proved. Dr. Sinclair's initial interest in
resveratrol had nothing to do with red
wine. It derived from work by Leonard
Guarente of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology who found a gene that
controlled the longevity of yeast, a single-
celled fungus.
Dr. Guarente and Dr. Sinclair, who had
come from Australia to work as a postdoctoral
student in Dr. Guarente's laboratory,
discovered the mechanism by which the gene makes
yeast cells live longer. The gene is known as Sir-2 in yeast, sir
standing for silent information regulator, and its equivalent in
mice and humans is called SIRT-1.
Dr. Guarente then found that the gene's protein needed a
common metabolite to activate it, and he developed the theory
that the gene, by sensing the level of metabolic activity,
mediates a phenomenon of great interest to researchers in
aging, the greater life span caused by caloric restriction.
Researchers have known since 1935 that mice fed a calorie
restricted diet — one with all necessary vitamins and nutrients
but 40 percent fewer calories — live up to 50 percent
longer than mice on ordinary diets.
This low-calorie-provoked increase in longevity occurs in
many organisms and seems to be an ancient survival strategy.
When food is plentiful, live in the fast lane and breed prolifically.
When famine strikes, switch resources to body maintenance
and live longer so as to ride out the famine.
Most people find it impossible to keep to a diet with 40 percent
fewer calories than usual. So if caloric restriction really
does make people as well as mice live longer — which is plausible
but not yet proved — it would be desirable to have some
drug that activated the SIRT-1 gene's protein, tricking it into
thinking that days of famine lay ahead.
In 2003 Dr. Sinclair, by then in his own laboratory, devised a
way to test a large number of chemicals
for their ability to mimic caloric
restriction in people by activating
SIRT-1. The champion was resveratrol,
already well known for its possible
health benefits.
Critics point out that resveratrol is a
powerful chemical that acts in many
different ways in cells. The new experiment,
they say, does not prove that
resveratrol negated the effects of a
high-calorie diet by activating SIRT-1.
Indeed, they are not convinced that
resveratrol activates SIRT-1 at all.
"It hasn't really been clearly shown, the
way a biochemist would want to see it,
that resveratrol can activate sirtuin,"
said Matt Kaeberlein, a former student
of Dr. Guarente's who does research at
the University of Washington. Sirtuin
is the protein produced by the SIRT-1
gene.
Dr. Sinclair said experiments at Sirtris
had essentially wrapped up this point.
But they have not yet been published,
so under the rules of scientific debate
he cannot use them to support his
position. In his Nature article, he
therefore, has to concede that "Whether resveratrol acts
directly or indirectly through Sir-2 in vivo is currently a subject
of debate."
Given that caloric restriction forces a trade-off between fertility
and lifespan, resveratrol might be expected to reduce fertility
in mice. Dr. Sinclair said he saw no such infertility in his
experiment, but he said that might be because the mice were
not on a low-calorie diet.
If resveratrol does act by prodding the sirtuins into action,
then there will be much interest in the new class of sirtuin
activators now being tested by Sirtris. Dr. Westphal, the company's
chief executive, has no practical interest in the longevity-
promoting effects of sirtuins and caloric restriction.
For the Food and Drug Administration, if for no one else,
aging is not a disease and death is not an end-point. The
F.D.A. will approve only drugs that treat diseases in measurable
ways.