WASHINGTON
- The compound that makes red wine a healthful drink may also hold the
secret to a longer life, scientists say.
They found that resveratrol acted on fruit flies and worms in the same
way as a method known to extend the life of animals including monkeys
-- sharply restricting how much they eat.
The finding opens the possibility that
people could take a pill to achieve the same benefits as strict dieting
to live longer, healthier lives, said David Sinclair of Harvard Medical
School in Boston, who led the study.
"We found this chemical that can extend the
life span of every organism we give it to," Sinclair said in a
telephone interview. "We hope we can soon see molecules that treat
diseases of aging, like diabetes for example. ... We really can have
our cake and eat it, too."
Writing in the journal Nature, Sinclair and
colleagues at the University of Connecticut and Brown University in
Rhode Island said they were looking for some compound that would affect
the body the way caloric restriction does.
Scientists have learned molecules called
Sir2-like proteins or sirtuins, found in creatures ranging from
bacteria to humans, are involved in the anti-aging effects of
restricting calories.
"We were looking for molecules that would
stick to and activate this sirtuin protein," Sinclair said.
One clearly worked better than the others.
"When I realised it was a molecule from red
wine I almost fell out of my seat. This is the molecule people suspect
is behind the health benefits of red wine. It's uncanny."
'JUST AS ACTIVE'
Last year, Sinclair reported resveratrol
extended the life of yeast. Now he has tested it in fruit flies and
tiny worms, both of which share many basic biologic processes with
humans.
"If you give these compounds to these
animals they are healthier and longer-lived, and just as active. They
can eat as much as they like and they live considerably longer," said
Sinclair.
Flies are complex enough animals to answer
questions about fertility and weight gain, Sinclair said. Restricting
calories has been shown to make animals such as dogs and monkeys live
longer, but they are often lethargic and lose fertility.
"These flies, instead of being infertile,
they produced more eggs per day."
Sinclair has a vested interest in his
findings. He has formed a company to exploit his findings, called
Sirtris. A rival company has already developed a product called
Longevinex, which concentrates resveratrol into a pill.
Sinclair is now testing his compound in
mice, which are considerably closer to humans biologically than fruit
flies are.
"If it works in mice I would be pretty
confident it would work in people," Sinclair said.
He denied he wanted to market a pill simply
to extend life.
"Often people are scared we are going to
lengthen the life span of aging people and make them live in nursing
homes," he said. "What we are doing is finding molecules that
potentially will increase the health span of people, not just their
life spans."
(Reuters) |