Huberman Lab - Dr. David Sinclair: The Biology of Slowing & Reversing Aging
Episode Date: December 27, 2021In this episode, I am joined by Dr. David Sinclair, tenured Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and an expert researcher in the field of longevity. Dr. Sinclair is also the author of the b...ook Lifespan: Why We Age & Why We Don't Have To, and the host of the Lifespan Podcast, which launches January 5, 2022. In this interview, we discuss the cellular and molecular mechanisms of aging and what we all can do to slow or reverse the aging process. We discuss fasting and supplementation with resveratrol, NAD, metformin, and NMN. We also discuss the use of caffeine, exercise, cold exposure, and why excessive iron load is bad for us. We discuss food choices for offsetting aging and promoting autophagy (clearance of dead cells). And we discuss the key blood markers everyone should monitor to determine your biological versus chronological age. We also discuss the future of longevity research and technology. This episode includes lots of basic science and specific, actionable protocols, right down to the details of what to do and when. By the end, you will have in-depth knowledge of the biology of aging and how to offset it. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Dr. David Sinclair, Harvard Medical School (00:03:45) Sponsors: AG1, LMNT (00:07:45) “Aging as a Disease” vs. Longevity & Anti-Aging (00:10:23) What Causes Aging? The Epigenome (00:15:53) Cosmetic Aging (00:17:15) Development Never Stops, Horvath Clock (00:20:12) Puberty Rate as a Determinant of Aging Rate (00:23:00) Fasting, Hunger & Food Choices (00:32:44) Fasting Schedules, Long Fasts, (Macro)Autophagy (00:34:50) Caffeine, Electrolytes (00:35:56) Blood Glucose & the Sirtuins; mTOR (00:37:55) Amino Acids: Leucine, “Pulsing” (00:44:35) Metformin, Berberine (00:50:29) Resveratrol, Wine (00:53:20) What Breaks a Fast? (00:56:45) Resveratrol, NAD, NMN, NR; Dosage, Timing (01:09:10) Are Artificial Sweeteners Bad for Us? (01:12:04) Iron Load & Aging (01:15:05) Blood Work Analysis (01:19:37) C-Reactive Protein, Cholesterol: Serum & Dietary (01:26:02) Amino Acids, Plants, Antioxidants (01:33:45) Behaviors That Extend Lifespan, Testosterone, Estrogen (01:40:35) Neuroplasticity & Neural Repair (01:46:19) Ice Baths, Cold Showers, “Metabolic Winter” (01:48:07) Obesity & How It Accelerates Aging, GnRH (01:52:10) Methylation, Methylene Blue, Cigarettes (01:56:17) X-Rays (01:59:00) Public Science Education, Personal Health (02:05:40) The Sinclair Test You Can Take: www.doctorsinclair.com (02:08:13) Zero-Cost Support & Resources, Sponsors, Supplements, Instagram Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
Today, my guest is Dr. David Sinclair, professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School and
co-director of the Paul F. Glenn Center for the Biology of Aging.
Dr. Sinclair's work is focused on why we age and how to slow or reverse the effects of
aging by focusing on the cellular and molecular pathways that exist in all cells of the body
and that progress those cells over time from young cells to old cells.
By elucidating the biology of cellular, maturation, and aging, Dr. Sinclair's group has figured
out intervention points by which any of us, indeed all of us, can slow or reverse the
effects of aging.
What is unique about his work is that it focuses on behavioral interventions, nutritional
interventions, as well as supplementation and prescription drug interventions that can
help us all age more slowly and reverse the effects of aging in all tissues of the body.
Dr. Sinclair holds a unique and revolutionary view of the aging process, which is that aging is not the normal and natural consequence that we all will suffer,
but rather that aging is a disease that can be slowed or halted. Dr. Sinclair continually publishes original research articles in the most prestigious and
competitive scientific journals.
In addition to that, he's published a popular book that was a New York Times bestseller.
The title of that book is Life Span, Why We Age and Why We Don't Have To.
He is also very active in public facing efforts to educate people on the biology of aging
and slowing the aging process.
Dr. Sinclair and I share a mutual interest in excitement in public education about science.
And so I'm thrilled to share with you that we've partnered.
And Dr. Davidson Claire is going to be launching the Lifespan podcast,
which is all about the biology of aging and tools to intervene in the aging process.
That podcast will launch Wednesday, January 5th.
You can find it at the link in the show notes
to this episode today, as well.
You can subscribe to that podcast on YouTube, Apple,
or Spotify, or anywhere that you get your podcasts.
Again, the lifespan podcast featuring Dr. Davidson Claire
begins Wednesday, January 5th, 2022.
Be sure to check it out.
You're going to learn a tremendous amount of
information and you're going to learn both the mechanistic science behind aging, the mechanistic
science behind reversing the aging process and practical tools that you can apply in your everyday
life. In today's episode, Dr. Sinclair and I talk about the biology of aging and tools to
intervene in that process. And so you might view today's episode as a primer for the lifespan podcast, because we
delve deep into the behavioral tools, nutritional aspects, supplementation aspects of the biology
of aging.
We also talk about David's important discoveries of the Sir Tuyen's particular molecular
components that influence what is called the epigenome.
And if you don't know what the epigenome is, you will soon learn in today's episode.
Coming away from today's episode,
you will have in-depth knowledge
about the biology of aging at the cellular, molecular,
and what we call the circuit level,
meaning how the different organs and tissues of the bodies
age independently and how they influence
the aging of each other.
Today's episode gets into discussion
about many aspects of aging and tools to combat aging that have
not been discussed on any other podcast or in the book lifespan.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching
and research roles at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information
about science and science-related tools to the general public.
In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
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Now, my conversation with Dr. David Sinclair.
Thank you for coming.
Thanks for having me here.
It's good to see you.
This is Matae, by the way. we're toasting at 11 a.m. Unlike other podcasts we
well I don't drink alcohol so I'm boring that way. But truly thanks for being
here. I have a ton of questions for you. We go way back in some sense but that
doesn't mean that I don't have many, many questions
about aging longevity, lifespan, actionable protocols to increase how long we live, et cetera.
And I just want to start off with a very simple question.
I'm not even sure there's an answer to, but what is the difference between longevity,
anti-aging, and aging as a disease?
Because I always say you with a statement,
aging is a disease.
Right.
Well, so longevity is the more academic way
we describe what we research.
Anti-aging is kind of the same thing,
but it's got a bad rap because it's been used
by a whole bunch of people that don't know
what they're talking about.
So I really don't like that term anti-aging,
but aging as a disease and longevity
are perfectly valid ways to talk about this subject.
So let's talk about aging as a disease.
When I started my research disease here
Harvard Medical School, it was considered,
if there's something that's wrong with you,
and it's a rare thing, has to be less than 50% of the population,
that's definitely a disease.
And then people work their whole lives to try and cure that condition.
And so I looked up what's the definition of aging.
And so as well, it's a deterioration and in health and sickness,
and you can die from it, typically you do.
Something that sounds pretty much like a disease.
But the caveat is that if more
than half the population gets this condition aging, it's put in a different bucket, which
is, first of all, that's outrageous because it's just a totally arbitrary cutoff. But think
about this, that we're ignoring the major cause of all these diseases. Aging is 80% and 90%
the cause of heart disease Alzheimer's. If we didn't get old and our bodies stayed youthful,
we would not get those diseases.
And actually what we're showing in my levels,
if you turn the clock back in tissues,
those diseases go away.
So aging is the problem.
And instead through most of the last 200 years,
we've been sticking band aids on diseases
that have already occurred because of aging.
And then it's too late. So there are a couple of things. One is we want to slow aging down, so we don't get those
diseases. And when they do occur, don't just take a band-aid on, reverse the age of the
body, and then the diseases will go away.
That clarifies a lot for me. Thank you. Can we point to one specific general phenomenon
in the body that underlies aging?
Yeah, well, that's contentious because scientists
like to come up with new hypotheses
as it's how they build their careers.
But fortunately, during the 2000s,
we settled on 809 major causes of aging.
We called them hallmarks because causes was a little bit too strong.
But these 809 causes, at least for the first time allowed us to come around
and talk together.
And we put them on a pizza,
so everyone got an equal weighting, equal slices.
And before that, by the way,
we were trying to kill each other in the field.
It was horrible.
Interesting that you guys work on aging
and trying to kill each other.
Yeah, isn't it?
Well, kill each other's careers.
I like to think I was fairly generous, but I was one of the kids.
And the old guard really didn't like the new guard.
We just came along in the 1990s and said, free radicals don't do much.
There were actually genes called longevity genes.
And that caused a whole ruckus, and there was this competition for what never happened,
which was a Nobel Prize for this. And it just led to a lot of competition.
I would go to meetings and people would shout at each other and just backstab, it was horrible.
But then, fortunately, in the 2000s, we rallied around this new map of aging with these causes or hallmarks.
But I think that there's one slice of the pizza that is way larger than the others.
And we can get to that, but that's the information
in the cell that I call the epigenome.
Well, tell us a little bit more about the epigenome.
Frame it for us, if you will.
And then we'll get into ways that one can adjust
the epigenome in positive ways.
Yeah, so in science, what I like to do,
a reductionist, is to boil it down.
And I actually ended up boiling aging down to an equation, which is the loss of information
due to entropy.
It's a hard thing to overcome the second law of thermodynamics.
That's there.
But this equation really represents the fact that I think aging is a loss of information
in the same way that when you zerox something,
I mean, a thousand times you'll lose that information or you try to copy a cassette tape,
or even if you send information across the internet, some of it will get lost.
That's what I think is aging.
And there are two types of information in the body.
There is the genetic information, which is digital, ATCG, the chemical letters of DNA.
But there's this other part of the information
in the body that's just as important.
It's essential, in fact, and that's the systems
that control which genes are switched on and off
in what cell, at what time, in response to what we eat, et cetera.
And it turns out that 80% of our future longevity and health
is controlled by this second part, the epigenetic information, the control systems.
I liken the DNA to the music that's on a DVD or a compact disc for the younger people
used to use these things.
I recall.
Yeah.
And then the epigenome is the reader that says, okay, in this cell we need to play that set
of songs.
And in this other cell we have to play a different set of songs.
But over time, aging is the equivalent of scratching the CD and the DVD so that you're not playing
the right songs and cells when they don't hear the right songs, they get messed up and they
don't function well.
And that is what I'm saying is the main driver of aging and these other hallmarks are largely
manifestations of that process.
Can we go a little deeper into what the scratches are?
Is it the way that the DNA are packed into a cell?
Is it the way that they're spaced?
What are the scratches that you're referring to?
So DNA is six foot long.
If you join your chromosomes together, you get a six foot per cell.
So there's enough to go to the moon and back eight times anybody. So DNA is six foot long. If you join your chromosomes together, get it at six foot per cell.
So there's enough to go to the moon and back eight times in your body.
And it has to be wrapped up to exist inside us.
But it's not just wrapped up willy-nilly, it's not just a bundle of string.
It's wrapped up very carefully in ways that dictates which genes are switched on and off.
And when we're developing in the embryo, the cell marks the DNA with chemicals that says,
okay, this gene is for a nerve cell, you, you cell will stay a nerve cell for the next
hundred years, if you're lucky.
Don't turn into a skin cell, that would be bad.
And those chemicals, there are many different types of chemicals, but one's called methylation.
Those little methyls will mark which songs get played for the rest of your life.
And there are other marks that change daily.
But in total, what we're saying is that the body controls the genome through the ability to mark the DNA
and then compact some parts of it, silence those genes, don't read those genes,
and open others, keep others open, that should stay open. And that pattern of
genes that are silent and open, silent open, is what dictates the cells type, the cells function.
And then the scratches are the disruption of that. So genes that were once silent,
and you could say it's a gene that is involved in skin, it's starting to come on in the brain, shouldn't be there,
but we see this happen. And vice versa, the gene might get shut off over time during aging,
cells over time lose these structures, lose their identity, they forget what they're supposed to do,
and we get diseases. We call that aging, and we can measure that. In fact, we can measure it in
such a way that we can predict when somebody's going to die based on the changes in those chemicals.
Are these changes, the same sorts of changes that underlie the outward body surface manifestations of aging that most of us are familiar with? of the face, walking around New York lately, it's amazing to me.
There are certain people that seem to walk looking down at the sidewalk because their spine
is essentially in a sea shape, right?
A hallmark, if you will, of aging that most of us are familiar with.
Are these same sorts of DNA scratches associated with that?
Or are we talking about people that are potentially going to look older but simply live longer?
Well, it's actually you are as old as you look if you want to generalize.
So let's start with centenarian families.
These are families that tend to live over 100.
When they're 70, they still look 50 or less.
So it is a good indicator.
It's not perfect because you can like me grow up in Australia
and accelerate the aging of your skin.
But in general, how you look, no one's ever died from gray hair.
But overall, you can get a sense just from the ability of skin to hold itself up,
how thin it is, the number of wrinkles.
That is actually a great paper just came out that said that
an AI system looking at the face could very accurately predict someone's age.
Very interesting.
So I started off in developmental neurology.
So one of the things that I learned early on that I still believe wholeheartedly is that
development doesn't stop at age 12 or 15 or even 25 that your entire life is one long developmental arc.
So in thinking about different portions of that developmental arc, the early
portion of infancy and especially puberty seemed like especially rapid stages
of aging. And I know we normally look at babies and children and kids in puberty and we think,
oh, they're so vital, they're so young.
And yet, the way you describe these changes in the epigenome
and the way you have framed aging as a disease leads me
to ask our periods of immense vitality,
the same periods when we're agent faster.
Yes.
Yes, and this is something I've never talked about,
at least not publicly.
So this is a really good question.
So those chemicals we can measure,
it's also known as the Horvath clock.
It's the biological clock.
It's separate from your chronological age.
So actually, what I didn't mention
is that when the AI looked at the faces of those people,
they could predict their biological age, their internal age.
So your skin represents the age of your organs as well.
And the people that look after themselves, we can talk about how to do that later.
But there are some people that are 10, 20 years younger than other people biologically.
And it turns out if you measure that clock from birth or even before birth, if you look
at animals, there's a massive increase in age you measure that clock from birth or even before birth, if you look at animals,
there's a massive increase in age based on that clock early in life.
So you're right.
So that's a really important point that you have accelerated aging during the first few years of life.
And then it goes linear towards the rest of your life.
But there's another interesting thing you brought up, which is that we're finding that the genes
that get messed up, that get scratched, that are leading to aging, are
those early developmental genes. They come on late in life and just mess up the system,
and they seem to be particularly susceptible to those scratches. So what's causing the
scratches? Well, we know of a couple of things in my lab. We figured out one is broken
chromosomes, DNA damage,
particularly cuts to the DNA breaks.
So if you have an X-ray or a cosmic ray,
or even if you go out in the sun
and you'll get your broken chromosomes,
that accelerates the unwinding
of those beautiful DNA loops that I mentioned.
We can actually do this to our mouse.
We can accelerate that process and we get an old mouse, 50% older, and it has this bent
spine, chifosis, it has gray hair, its organs are old.
So we now can control aging the forward direction.
The other thing that accelerates aging is massive cell damage or stress.
So we pinched nerves and we saw that their aging process was accelerated as well.
Incredible. Yeah, this is more of an anecdotal phenomenon. It is an anecdotal phenomenon.
But at this experience of in junior high school, you know, going home for a summer and you
come back in high school in the US, usually starts eighth or ninth grade or grade eight or
grade nine for your Canadians.
And then some of the kids, like they grew beards over the summer or they completely matured
quickly over the summer.
Do you think there's any reason to believe that rates of entry into and through puberty
have can predict overall rates of aging. In other words, if a kid is a slow burner, they basically acquire
the traits of puberty slowly over many years. Can we make some course prediction that they
are going to live a long time versus a kid that goes home for the summer and comes back
a completely different organism or appearing to be a completely different organism.
Like, they basically age very quickly in the summer.
Does that mean they're aging very quickly overall?
Well, yeah, I don't want to scare anybody.
Sure.
There are studies that show that the slower you take to develop, it also is predictive of
having a longer, healthier life.
And it may have something to do with growth hormone.
We know that growth hormone is pro-aging.
Anyone who's taking growth hormone, pay attention.
We know that someone who's taking growth hormone.
They often will acquire these characteristics of vitality,
like improved smoothness of skin,
but their whole body shape changes.
Yeah, I mean, you feel better for a short amount of time.
You'll build up muscle, you feel great.
But it's like burning your candle at both ends.
Ultimately, if you want to live longer,
you want less of that.
And the animals that have been generated
and mutants that have low growth hormone,
sometimes these are dwarfs.
They live the longest by far.
A guy in my lab, Michael Bunkowski,
he had the longest lived mouse.
A mouse typically lives about two and a bit years.
He had a mouse that lived five years,
and he gave it,
chloric restrictions were fasting,
combined with one of these dwarf mutations,
low growth hormone.
I think he called it Yoda.
But you look at who lives the longest.
It's the really small people.
This is a bit anecdotal, but it sounds like it might be true, is that the people who
played the munchkins in the Wizard of Oz, many of them went on to live into their 90s
and beyond.
Really?
Yeah.
Amazing.
And there are some Laurent dwarfs as well.
There are dwarf mutations in South America, and they seem to be protected against many of the
diseases of aging. You barely ever see heart disease or cancer in these families.
So, having owned a very large dog breed, a bulldog master, who lived a long life for a bulldog
11 years, but there are many dogs that will live 12, 16 years that are smaller dogs, can we say that there's a direct relationship
between body size and longevity or duration of life?
Well, there is, but that doesn't mean
that you're a slave to your early epigenome,
nor to your genome.
The good news is that the epigenome can change.
Those loops and structures can be modified
by how you live your life.
And so if you're born tall and I wasn't, and I wished at the time I did grow, but no
matter what size you are, you can have a bigger impact on your life than anything your genes
give you.
80% is epigenetic, not genetic.
So let's talk about some of the things that people can do. And I've kind of batch these into categories rather than just diving right into actionable protocols. So the first
one relates to food, blood sugar, insulin. This is something I hear a lot about that fasting
is good for us. But rarely do I hear why it's good for us. I know one of the reasons
I'm excited to talk to you today is because I want to drill into the details of this because
I think understanding the mechanism will allow people to make better choices and not simply
to just decide whether or not they're going to fast or not fast or how long they're going
to fast. I think should be dictated by someone understanding of the mechanism. So why is it that having elevated blood sugar glucose
and insulin ages us more quickly?
And or why is it that having periods of time each day
or perhaps longer can extend our lifespan?
Well, let's start with what I think was a big mistake,
was the idea that
People should never be hungry. We live in a world now where there's at least three meals a day And then we've got companies selling bars and snacks in between
So the feeling of hunger all some people never experience hunger in their whole lives. It's really really bad for them
It was based I believe on the 20th century view that you don't want
to stress out the pancreas, and you try to keep insulin levels pretty steady and not have
this fluctuation. What we actually found, my colleagues and I across this field of longevity,
is that when you look at, first of all, animals, whether it's a dog or a mouse or a monkey,
the ones that live the longest by far, 30% longer,
and stay healthy, are the ones that don't eat all the time.
I'm actually was first discovered back in the early 20th century,
but people ignored it.
And then I was rediscovered in the 1930s,
Clive McCay did a Clark restriction.
He put cellulose in
the food of rats so they couldn't get as many calories even though they ate. And those
rats lived 30% longer. But then it went away. And then it came back in the 2000s in a big
way when a couple of things happened. One is that my lab and others showed that there
are longevity genes in the body that come on and protect us from aging
and disease.
The group of genes that I work on are called serotones,
they're seven of them.
And we showed in 2005 in a science paper
that if you have low levels of insulin
and another molecule called insulin-like growth factor,
those low levels turn on the longevity genes.
One of them, that's really important
is called SIRT1. But by having high levels of insulin all day, being fed means your longevity
genes are not switched on. So you're falling apart, your epigenome, your information that
keeps yourselves functioning over time, just to grades quicker. Your clock is ticking
faster by always being fed. The other thing that I think
might be happening by always having food around is that it's not allowing the cell to have
periods of rest and and reestablish the epigenum. And so it also is accelerating in that direction.
There's plenty of other reasons as well that are not as profound,
such as having low levels of glucose in your body will trigger your major muscles in your brain to
become more sensitive to insulin and suck the glucose out of your bloodstream, which is very good.
You don't want to have glucose flowing around too much. And that will ward off type 2 diabetes.
So hunger, of course, is associated with low
blood glucose and low insulin. Do you think there's anything about the subjective experience
of hunger itself that could be beneficial for longevity?
Yeah, I do. Though you get used to the feeling of not eating. So I'm kind of screwed that
way. It's like cold water. You eventually
adapt. You get used to it, unfortunately. But there are some studies that are being done at the
National Institutes of Health that are able to simulate the effect of hunger, but still provide
the calories. And it's looking like there's a small component that's due to hunger. But most of it
actually is because you've got these periods of not being fed, and then the body turns
on these defensive genes.
There's a really interesting experiment
that was published maybe a couple of years ago
by Rafael de Carbo down at the NIH.
What he did was he took over 10,000 mice
and gave them different combinations
of fat carbohydrate, protein,
and he was trying to figure out what was the best combination.
And then he also cleverly had a group, well two groups, one that was fed all the time,
or eight as much as they wanted, and the other group was only given food for an hour a
day.
And it turns out they ate roughly the same amount of calories, because of course in an hour
they're stuffing their faces.
It turns out it didn't matter what diet he gave them. It was only
the group that ate within that window that lived longer and dramatically longer. So my conclusion
is, and my is very similar to us metabolically, I think that tells us that it's not as important
what you eat. It's when you eat during the day.
What is the protocol that people can extrapolate from that? Or maybe I should just ask you, what is your protocol for when to eat
and when to avoid food?
Do you ever fast longer than 24 hours?
What do you do?
And what do you think is a good jumping off place
if people want to explore this as a protocol?
Well, if there's one thing I could say,
if I would say definitely try to skip a meal a day,
that's the best thing.
Does it matter which meal?
Or the essentially equivalent?
Well, as long as it's at the end or the beginning of the day, because then you add that to
the sleep period where you're hopefully not eating.
I think that's an excellent point.
I realize it's a simple one, but I think it's an excellent one because I think one of the
things that people struggle with the most is knowing when and how to initiate this
so-called intermittent fasting.
And the middle of the day obviously is not tacked to the sleep cycle in the same way.
So it's much harder as well for many people.
Yeah.
Well, I'll tell you what I do.
I skip breakfast.
I have a tiny bit of yoga or olive oil because the supplements I have need to be dissolved
in it.
And then I go throughout the whole day as I'm doing right now here with this glass of water here,
I'm just keeping myself filled with liquids,
and so I don't feel hungry.
Beware that the first two to three weeks
when you try that, you will feel hungry.
And you also have a habit of wanting to chew on something,
that there's a lot of physical parts to it.
But try to make it through the first three weeks and do it without breakfast or do it without dinner.
And you'll get through it.
And I did that most, for most of my life actually, mainly because I wasn't hungry in the morning,
some people are very hungry in the morning, and they may want to consider skipping dinner
instead.
But I will go throughout the whole day, I don't get the crashes of the high glucose and the low glucose that
Anyone who goes, oh man, it's three o'clock. I'm gonna need a sleep if you do what I do
You will not experience that anymore because what my body does is it's it regulates
Blood sugar levels naturally my liver is putting out glucose when it needs to and it's very steady and gives me pure focus throughout the day
And I don't even have to think about lunch, I'm just powering through. At dinner, I love food as much as anybody. So I will eat
a regular, pretty healthy meal, I'll eat, I'll try to eat mostly vegetables, I can eat some fish,
some shrimp. I rarely will eat a steak. In fact, my microbiome is so adapted to my diet. Now,
if I eat a steak, it will
not get digested very well. I'll feel terrible. If I don't eat a steak, I feel terrible.
Well, we are a routine lineage, but we can talk about that some other way.
Well, everybody's different. I mean, that's the other thing. What works for me may not
be perfect for you, and we do have to measure things to know what's working. I'd rarely eat dessert, I gave up dessert and sugar in my,
when I turned 40, and occasionally I'll steal a bit of dessert because it doesn't hurt if you steal
it, right? But other than that, I avoid sugar, which includes simple carbohydrates, bread, I try to
avoid. I've actually noticed, this is just a side note, I used to get build up of plaque pretty easily,
and every time I went to the dentist they'd have to scrape it off, and I even bought tools to
scrape it off because it was driving me nuts. I don't get plaque anymore, and I think it's because
of my diet, I don't have those sugars in my mouth that the bacteria feed on and then form the biofilm
on the teeth. Much better breath, by the way. That's a benefit. So, do you ever fast longer than this?
It sounds like if you, um, if you go to bed, well, use tend to stay up late.
I know because I get texts from you in like two in the morning, um, my time, which means
you're out very late and up early as well.
But assuming that people go to sleep sometime around 11, 30 or 12, plus or minus an hour,
and wake up sometime around 7 a.m. plus or minus 90 minutes.
You're eating more or less on a,
it sounds like a,
some like a 20 hours of fasting,
four hours of eating, or 16 hours of fasting,
and eight hours of food intake, et cetera.
But do you ever do longer fast,
like 48 hours or 72 hours or weeklone fast?
Occasionally I do. So my typical day, I would only eat within a two hour window, just
usually I meet it either eating out or so you're 22, too. Yeah. Yeah, but I love, well,
and if you exercise, do you feel like then you just power through and maintain that fasted
state? Absolutely. I can exercise and now my body's so used to it,
I don't feel like I need food after exercising.
I used to.
And have I gone longer?
Yes, but not very often.
I find it quite difficult to go more than 24 hours.
But when I do it, maybe it's once a month, I'll go for two days.
After two and actually even better if you go for three days without eating, it kicks in even greater
longevity benefits. So there's a system called the autophagy system which I just
old and misfolded proteins in the body. And there's a natural cleansing that happens when you're hungry.
Macro autophagy its name is, but a good friend of mine, Anna Maria Cuavo at Albert Einstein
College of Medicine discovered a deep cleanse called the Shapiro-mediated Autophagy, which
kicks in day two, day three, which really gets rid of the deep proteins. And what excites me is
she just put out a big paper that said, if you trigger this process in an old mouse, it leaves 35% longer.
Wow.
Yeah, so it's a big deal.
If I could go longer, I would, but I just find that with my lifestyle, and I'm going always
day, you know, 110%, I need to eat at least once a day, unfortunately.
One more practical question than a mechanistic question related to this.
The practical question is, when you are fasting, regardless of how long, I know you're ingesting fluids like water and presumably some caffeine. I
heard you had several or more or more espresso today, which is impressive. But are you also
ingesting electrolytes? I know some people get light headed. They start to feel shaky when
they fast and that the addition of sodium to their water or potassium and magnesium is something that's becoming
a little more invoked now.
Is that something that you do or that you see a need for people to do?
Well, it makes sense, but I haven't had a need to do it.
So I don't.
I drink tea during the day and coffee when I'm first awake, and I't get the shakes. So, you know, I don't fix what's not broken and I do add things to my protocol that I
think will improve me and avoid those things, of course, that won't.
But yeah, because I don't have a need for it, I don't try it.
But it doesn't make sense, especially if you've had a big night, the night before, you
probably want to supplement with that.
But I think there's there's this fair amount of good stuff
in tea and coffee as it is.
Okay, so then the mechanistic question is,
you've told us that there's ample evidence
that keeping your blood sugar low for a period of time,
these 24 hours can help trigger some of these
pro-launch-evity anti-aging mechanisms.
And that extending them out two or three days can trigger yet additional mechanisms
of gobbling up of dead cells and things of that sort.
How is it that blood glucose triggers these mechanisms?
Because we've said, okay, remove glucose and things get better.
You've talked before, maybe we could talk more now about some of the underlying cellular and
genetic mechanisms, things like the serotonins, but how are glucose and the serotonins actually
tethered to one another mechanistically? There's a really good question. That proves your scientist,
or the world-leading one. So what've now know is that these longevity pathways,
we call them these longevity genes, talk to each other.
And we used to say, oh, my longevity genes,
more important than yours, it was ridiculous.
Because they're all talking to each other.
You pull one lever and the other one moves.
And the way to think of it is that there are systems
set up to detect what you're eating.
So the certunals will mainly respond to sugar and insulin.
And then there's this other system called mTOR,
which is sensing how much protein or amino acids are coming into your body.
And they talk to each other. We can pull one and affect the other and vice versa.
But together, when you're fasting, you'll get the sertoin activation, which is good for you.
And you'll also, through lack of amino acids,
particularly three of them,
loose in eye-solucine valine,
the body will down-regulate emtore.
And it's that up-sertuan down-emtore
that is hugely beneficial and turns on
all of the body's defenses,
the chewing up the old proteins,
improving insulin sensitivity,
giving us more energy, repairing cells, all of that. And so these two pathways, I think, are the most important
for longevity. So interesting. You mentioned Lucine. Within the resistance training,
slash bodybuilding, slash fitness community, Lucine gets a lot of attention because
there are longstanding debates about how much protein one needs per day and how much one can assimilate at each meal.
It makes for many YouTube videos and not much else, frankly.
However, it's clear that because of loosens effects on the M-Tore pathway, that there are
many people, not just people in these particular fitness communities that are actively trying to
ingest more loosening on a regular basis in order to maximize
their wellness and fitness.
And in some cases muscle growth, but also just wellness.
But what I interpret your last statement to mean
is that leucine, because it triggers cellular growth,
is actually pro-agent, in some sense.
Is that right?
Well, it could be. That's that's what the evidence
suggests. And again, it goes back to the debate. Should you supplement with growth hormonal
testosterone? All of these activities will give you immediate benefits. You'll you'll bulk
up more, you'll feel better immediately. But based on the research, it's at the expense
of long-term health. So my view of longevity,
the way I treat my body is I don't burn both candles. I have one end of the candle lit. I'm very
careful. I don't blow on it. But I also do enough exercise that I'm building up my muscle,
but I'm not huge. Anyone who's seen me knows that I'm not a professional bodybuilder.
But I tried to actually, here's
the key, and I haven't said this publicly that I can remember, I pulse things so that I
get periods of fasting, and then I eat, then I take a supplement, then I fast, then I exercise,
and I'm taking the supplements and eating in the right timing to allow me to build up muscle sometimes
because you can't just expect to take something constantly and do something constantly for
it to work.
And that's why it's taken me about 15 years to develop my protocol.
And there's a lot of subtlety to it.
Yeah, it sounds like a very rational protocol.
Does the name Ori Hofmechler mean anything to you?
No.
Okay. Just briefly, I discovered Ori Hoffmeckler about 15 years ago.
He was a in Israeli special forces. He's now got to be close to 70.
Forgive me, Ori, if that's, that that number is inflated.
He wrote a book called The Warrior Diet, which got very little attention at the time. But what he
said was, when he was in Israeli special forces, they rarely very little attention at the time. But what he said was
when he was in Israeli special forces, they rarely ate more than once per day, and sometimes once every second or third day. And this is a guy who maintains an incredible
physical stature. He's very lean, very strong, and very vital at, you know, I wouldn't say an
advanced age, but he's getting up there and he just seems to be getting better and better.
Ori Hofmeckler was the person who essentially found it, if you will, although our ancestors
founded to be completely fair.
The so-called intermittent fasting diet, he called it the warrior diet and this book didn't
get much attention.
But one of the things that you just said really reminded me
of Ori, I sat down with him, I actually went to his home
and sat down with him and he said,
fasting is wonderful, but these pulses
where you nourish the body,
or even slightly over-nourish the body,
provided they aren't too frequent,
have a tremendous effect on vitality.
And so I want to use that as kind of a segue
to address this issue of vitality. And so I want to use that as kind of a segue to address this issue of vitality
versus longevity. Because here, you're telling me, and certainly the evidence supports, that,
you know, growth hormone will make you feel better and younger, taking testosterone, or estrogen,
we should probably say, there are, right, women who take hormone therapies later in life who take
estrogen, they experience a strong increase
in vitality if it's done correctly.
But there is an effect of aging the body more rapidly.
It's sort of a second puberty, if you will.
But this idea of restriction and then pulsing,
not necessarily feast and famine,
but certainly famine and feast in lowercase letters.
There really seems to be something about that.
So at a cellular level, we go back to M-Tor and the Sertunans.
How do you think that the cells might be reacting
to this kind of lowercase feast and uppercase famine
type protocol?
All right. Well, the pulsing, I think, is what you want to do is to get the cells to be perceiving
adversity.
Because our modern life, we're sitting around, we're eating too much, we're not exercising.
Our cells respond, they go, hey, everything's cool, no problem.
And they become relaxed and they're on turn on their defenses and we age rapidly.
We can see it in the clock.
People who exercise and eat less have a slower ticking clock.
It's a fact.
But my protocol is different than most people's because I am pulsing it.
Now the first of all, let's get to why I didn't even think that might be possible because
I didn't read the warrior diet.
What I found in my research was that if we gave or is veratrol, this red wine molecule
that became well known in the 2000s, if we gave it to mice, their whole lifespan, they
were protected against a high-fat diet, which we call the Western diet. They had lean organs.
They lived slightly longer, but not a lot.
And if we gave them a high-fat diet without resveratrol, they actually lived a lot shorter.
So resveratrol protected them against the high-fat diet.
We gave it to them on a normal diet.
They just ate it when they wanted, and there wasn't much effect.
This is what's not known though it's in the supplemental data
of the paper that nobody ever reads.
The mice that we give in Resveratrol every second day
on a normal diet,
lived dramatically longer than any other group.
So people out there, you know, my critics say,
our Resveratrol didn't extend the lifespan
of mice on a normal diet,
therefore it's not aging, it's just lifespan of mice on a normal diet. Therefore, it's not aging.
It's just protecting against a high-fat diet.
Well, look at the supplemental data, please.
If you give it to the mice every other day, we had mice living over three years.
Wow.
That's a long time for...
I have got many, many mice in my ownership at my lab at Stanford, and that's a very long
life for a mouse.
It was, by far, and so it was a long lifespan extension and what that told me is that probably
you don't want to be taking a supplement every day.
You can take it either every other day or give your body a rest and I do the same with
my meals.
I rest during the day and then I give a nutritious dinner to my body and then give
it a rest, same with exercise. And then I try to time it because there are times when I'm
taking the drug metformin, which mimics low energy. For those of you who don't know,
metformin is a drug given to type to diabetics to bring down their blood sugar levels.
But it's been found that looking at tens of thousands of veterans and others, that those
two type to diabetics
live longer than people that don't even get type two diabetes.
So it's a longevity drug.
Right now you have to get it from your doctor in the US, and most other countries you can
just get it over the counter.
And you protected, it looks like, based on epidemiological data, cancer, heart disease,
frailty, what else, dementia. So I take metformin,
you take metformin and you're fasting each day. So when do you take it relative to the
fasting?
I always take metformin in the morning, along with the resvertral, because for a number
of reasons, but mainly because my body responds better.
And I've been measuring my body for 12, 13 years.
But here's the thing.
If I'm going to exercise that day,
I will skip the metformin.
And a lot of people who do pay attention
to this kind of thing think that they should stop taking
metformin because they're never going to get muscle,
or it's going to affect their ability to build up muscle.
But that's not true.
What Metformin does to you, it actually just
reduces your ability to have stamina
because it's inhibiting your body's ability to make energy.
And so what happens is when you're on Metformin,
you do fewer reps.
But guess what?
Those muscles that you do build up on Metformin, you do fewer reps. But guess what?
Those muscles that you do build up on metformin have the same strength and have much lower inflammation
and other markers of aging.
You just won't have that extra 5% size of muscles.
So if you want large muscles, don't take metformin and you'll be fine during your exercise.
But for me, I'm not trying to get giant.
I want strong muscles, and I want to live longer and healthier.
So I just try to time it so that I get the most reps
out of my exercise regime.
But sometimes in scientific literature,
it's worth bringing this up.
If there's a 5% difference in a graph,
then either the press release or some reporter will say,
oh my goodness, big difference, 5%,
can't take metformin during exercise.
That's the headline.
And then you go in, and it's barely significant.
And the graph is distorted because they've
changed the axes to make it look bigger.
And now it's become a myth that metformin greatly inhibits
mobility to exercise, which is not true. But in an abundance of
caution, I skip my metformin on days I'm going to exercise. And
not only that, I'm one of the 20% of people that has a stomach
sensitivity to it. So if I'm not feeling great that day, I don't
take it either. You mentioned metformin is available only by
prescription from a doctor, at least in the US.
Burberry, this is substance that comes from tree bark. I also learned about many years ago from Ori. He said, if ever I'm going to overeat like a Thanksgiving meal or something, I take burberry.
Those were his words. And I tried it. And what's remarkable about burberry is that you can eat
enormous quantities of food and not feel as if you can eat enormous quantities of food and not
feel as if you've eaten enormous quantities of food.
I'm not necessarily recommending people do this, but what I noticed was if I took burberine,
which my understanding is it works very similarly to metformin, worse on the AMPK pathway, the
M-tor pathway, et cetera, that if I didn't ingest food in particular carbohydrates, I would feel a little dizzy and
kind of get a headache, like almost hypoglycemic.
What are your thoughts on burbrine as an alternative to metformin?
And are there any cautionary notes?
I mean, obviously people should talk to their doctor before adding or subtracting anything
from their life, including breath, or anything that comes up.
But with all that set aside, what are your thoughts about burbrine and timing of low blood
sugar and these sorts of things?
Right.
Well, before I had access to metformin, I was taking burbrine.
It's often known as the poor man's metformin, though that he just called me poor.
Women can take it too.
So the thing with burbrine, we've started it in my lab.
It is effective at boosting energetics in the body,
just like AMPK and that formant does.
And we've actually given it to rats and mice
and seeing that they are very healthy,
especially on a high fat diet.
So I think it's likely to be good.
There are some human studies that exist,
clinical trials showing that it increases insulin
sensitivity.
You have to take high doses, which is a good thing.
I think when people hear insulin sensitivity, sometimes people think, oh, well, that's
bad, right?
No, but you want yourselves to be insulin sensitive.
You don't want a lot of blood sugar floating around that can't be sequestered into cells.
Exactly.
So, this is anti-tiped 2 diabetes.
And so that this
burberine does have wonderful effects on the metabolism of animals and in some
clinical trials on dozens of people it's been tested. Now there's one
cautionary tale which just came up, Matt Kablein's lab published that burberine
reduced the lifespan of worms. But I'm not sure worms trump human clinical trials at this point.
So I'm not in my opinion. I wouldn't. I would not disrespect to my
C.Elegans colleagues or rather my colleagues that work on C.Elegans.
Yeah. What I like to do is to give all the information people can decide what they want,
but I would say based on the worm data, I wouldn't panic just yet. I think burglary
has been shown to be really safe in humans. You mentioned Reserarature. I think Burger King has been shown to be really safe in humans. You mentioned
Reseraratrol. I think now would be a great time to talk a little bit about protocols for
Reseraratrol, grape seed extract, et cetera. Let's start with the obvious one that I know
you get a lot, but for the record, can't I just drink red wine and get enough Reseraratrol,
David? You can try. You need to drink about 200 glasses a day.
So I'm sure it's been tried.
There are some.
And I drink a glass of red wine a day
if I get the chance.
But any more than that, it's a lot of calories
and your liver will get fatty and it's all bad.
So realistically, you can only get the thousand milligrams
that I take a day from a supplement
that's pure.
Now, there are a lot of people selling resveratrol.
If it's not light gray or white in color, throw it away.
The brown stuff has gone bad or is contaminated.
And the contaminated stuff be where it'll cause diarrhea.
But regular resveratrol should not do that.
So a thousand milligrams per day
is what you do. Yeah, and I have for about 15 years now. And you ingest that with some fatty
substance like olive oil or yogurt, is that right? Yeah, you have to. And other supplements,
Corsitan, curcumin, these are crunchy things. They're not going to get through your gut.
And I'm not just making this up. I always base my statements on human studies.
So we've done a lot of studies on Reservoir Troll
as of others since.
And we know that from we found out early,
I was one of the first people to take a high dose
for Reservoir Troll.
And when we included it with food,
the levels in my blood went up fivefold.
And so you want to have something in there.
If you just drink it with water, it's not going to get through. And unfortunately, some people
have done clinical trials without even thinking that they might need to dissolve it in something.
So are you taking this all at once in the morning and chasing it with some olive oil? Or
are you dissolving it in yogurt? What's the specific protocol?
Yeah, I've been improving, perfecting what I do.
For about 10 years, I would take some Greek yogurt,
a couple of spoonfuls, put the resveratrol on there,
mix it around, make sure it's dissolved,
and put that in my mouth and swallow that.
These days, what I like to do,
because I've realized that olive oil
and particularly oleic acid, one of the monounsaturated fatty acids, is also an
activator of the sirtoon defenses. So I'm trying to ingest more oleic acid. So I switched to
ole oil. What I do is I put a couple of teaspoons of ole oil in a glass, mix around the
reservoir troll and maybe some corset in a similar molecule, make sure it's dissolved.
say, Corsetina, similar molecule, make sure it's dissolved. I put a little bit of vinegar,
and if I have a basil leaf, I'll put that in, and it's like drinking some salad dressing, and it's great. Delicious. That raises a question that I want to ask before we get to NMN and NR,
and vitamin B3, which is by doing that,
do you think that it breaks your fast?
And I wanna just frame this question
of breaking the fast in a more general scientific theme
and I'd love your thoughts on this.
One of the questions I get asked all the time
is does ingesting blank break the fast?
Does eating this or drinking this coffee, you know,
if I walk in the room and someone else is eating a cracker, does it break my fast. It does eating this or drinking this coffee. If I walk in the room and someone else is eating a crack or does it break my fast?
People get pretty extreme with this. My sense, and please tell me if I'm wrong, my sense is, go to sleep, wake up at 6 a.m.,
I could imagine that black coffee,
or coffee with a little bit of cream,
might quote unquote break my fast,
but the body doesn't have a breaking the fast switch.
The body only speaks in the language
of glucose, AMPK, M-Tore, et cetera.
So do you worry that ingesting these calories
is going to quote unquote break your fast? And more generally, how do you worry that ingesting these calories is going to, quote unquote, break your fast?
And more generally, how do you think about the issue of whether
or not you're fasting enough to get these positive effects?
Because not everybody can manage on just water or just tea.
Or we should say not everybody is willing to manage on just
water or just tea for a certain part of the day.
Well, my first answer is not scientific.
It's philosophical.
If you don't enjoy life, what's the point?
And so I'd like a cup of coffee in the morning,
little bit of milk, spoon full of yogurt's not gonna kill me.
Olive oil doesn't have protein or carbs in it, not many.
And so I'm probably not affecting those
longevity pathways negatively.
But without that, first of all, I wouldn't enjoy my life as much.
Well, olive oil isn't as great as the yogurt, but I'm trying to optimize.
And there's no perfect solution to what we're doing.
And we're still learning.
We don't know what's optimal for me, let alone everybody else.
But I'm with you.
I don't believe that taking a couple of spoonfuls
of something, unless it's high fructose cancer, is going to hurt you, because I've now got
the rest of the day till about 8, 9pm of not eating anything. And that, you know, I forgive
myself for that. And that, there's a really good point here. You and I were discussing this earlier.
I was discussing this earlier, the point about doing this is that you try to do your best. If you go from regular living to Doni the whole day, you're going to fail.
Like quitting smoking cold turkey, it's easier to chew gum and stick the patch on because
your body has to get used to all sorts of habits.
And it's social, it's physical, putting stuff on your mouth, chewing, not just the low
blood sugar levels. And your brain will fight it.
Your limbic system is going to go, hey, do it, do it, do it, do it,
and you're going to have to fight it.
But once you get through it, you'll be better, but you do it in stages.
Do breakfast first.
Then do a small lunch, and then eventually cut lunch out.
Don't go cold turkey, because everyone knows it's a fact that if you try to do a strict diet
right out of the gates, you'll almost always fail.
I think that captures the essence of fasting rationally
and a rational approach to supplementation very well.
Along the lines of supplementation, what about NMN, NR, and B3?
Naisen.
How does one, I want to know what you do, I also want to know what I should do, like,
and I think most people want to know what they should do.
I mean, these are molecules that impact the CER2 and pathway, impact the pathways that
control aging, the rates of aging in the epichinone. How do they do that and how does one incorporate that into a supplementation
protocol should they choose to do that?
Well, disclaimer is I don't recommend anything, but I talk about what I do. So a bit of scientific
background, these CER2 and genes that we discovered, first first in yeast cells when I was at MIT, and then in animals as I moved to Harvard in the 2000s.
And one of my first postdocs, actually literally my first postdoc, I'm Cohen, published
a great paper just a couple of months ago and found that turning on the Surtuan 6 gene,
remember the 7.
Number 6 gene is very potent.
It extended the lifespan dramatically of mice that he engineered, both males and females, which is great. So what you want to do is
so naturally boost the activity of these sort two ends. They are genes, but they also make proteins,
that's what genes typically make, are encode. And then those proteins take care of the body in
many different ways, as we've discussed. So how do you turn on these genes and make the proteins
they make even more active?
You want to rev up that system.
So exercise will do it, fasting will do it,
what about supplementation?
Well, the first activator of the sertuins
that we discovered that acts on the enzyme
to make it do a better job of cleaning up the body
and protecting was the risveratrol.
We looked at thousands of different molecules,
eventually tens of thousands. And the one that was the best was resveratrol in the
dish. And then we gave it to little organisms, worms, and then flies and mice,
eventually humans. And we saw that it activated that enzyme. So resveratrol is one way to activate it.
You can think of it as the accelerator pedal on a car. It revs it up.
But there's something else that the SOT1s need to work. And that's NAD. NAD is a really small
molecule, little chemical in the body that we need for life. It's used by the body for chemical
reactions, 400 different reactions in the body and without it you're dead within seconds.
You need NAD. The problem that we've seen is that NAD levels decline
as you become obese, as you get older,
if you don't ever get hungry.
And the body not only doesn't make enough of it,
it's chewing it up as well.
There is an enzyme called CD38 that Eric Bowden
over at UCSF showed,
choose up, now he's now at the Buck Institute in California,
choose up NAD as you get older.
So it's a double whammy.
You don't make as much, you chew it up,
which is really bad because what we've shown in my lab
and so of others is that NAD levels are really important
for keeping those sort of two end defenses at a youthful level.
And you can give a lot of it as a veritrol,
but if you don't have the fuel,
you're only basically accelerating
a car that doesn't have enough gas.
So you want to do both.
And that's what I do.
I take a precursor to NAD called NMN,
and the body uses that to make the NAD molecule in one step.
And so I know from measuring dozens of human beings,
that if you take NMN for the time period that I do,
I've been taking it for years, but if you take it for about two weeks,
you'll double on average, double your NAD levels in the blood.
Okay, that's not public information.
That's from clinical trials that are not yet published over the last two years.
There are other ways to increase NAD levels in someone like me who's getting older, 52 now.
You can take NR, which is used to make NAMN,
which is used to make NAD,
and both NAMN and NR are sold by companies in the US.
NR is, lacks the phosphate,
phosphate's a small chemical, the body needs,
probably heard of the atom phosphorus.
Let's go back one step.
How do you make NR?
NR gets made from vitamin B3 often.
You can also find it in milk and other foods.
But sometimes people ask me,
why don't you just take vitamin B3 and
won't that just force the body to make NAD?
And the answer is, no, it doesn't work very well.
We know this just by doing the experiment.
But the reason, I think, is that NAD is a, I said it's a small molecule, but relative
to vitamin B3, it's big.
It's got those phosphates on there.
It's got a sugar. It's got the vitamin B attached.
So you've got all these components that come together to make this very complicated little molecule called NAD.
And when you give NMN, it contains all three components that the body needs to make NAD.
If you give NR or just vitamin B3, which is an even smaller molecule, the body has to find
these other components from somewhere else. So where do you get phosphate? Well,
body needs it for DNA, needs it for bones. So high doses of something that requires additional
phosphate makes me a little concerned. And we have compared NMN and NR head-to-head in
mouse studies. For instance, NMN, we've shown in a cell paper a few years ago, makes mice run further,
old mice can run 50% further because they better blood flow, better energy.
NR, the same dose, did not do that.
In fact, it had no effect.
I see.
A dosage-wise, if I were elect to take NMN in supplement form to increase my NAD levels and presumably
slow my aging, how much NMN should I take?
What's the protocol that you do and are the various forms that are out there, are some
better or some worse?
Well, I'm always happy to tell you what I do and what my father does, my 82-year-old father.
We take a gram of NMN every day.
So it's a gram of respiratory oil and a gram of NMN, right?
Okay, 1,000 milligrams.
Now, another important point, which is I'm not the same as everybody else.
I have a different microbiome, age, sex, right?
And so I've been measuring myself.
And so I know if something's,
or I think I know if something's making me
better or worse based on measuring 45 different things.
So I just want to be, people to be aware that
what I do may not perfectly work at all for others.
But I have studied, as I said, dozens of people
who take NMN at a gram, sometimes two grams.
And I know, by looking at all those people, that without any exceptions, that if you do
what I do, your NAD levels go up by about twofold or more.
And so I do that every day, the thousand milligrams.
Now, people sell it.
Now I never get into brands and all that.
First of all, I don't have the time
to measure products. I don't know. Though I should say, I do want to say, I'm working on
a solution for people to know what works and what's real and what isn't, but I'm not there
yet. And in the meantime, I would say, if you do want to buy this, let's say you want
to buy it in a man, look for a company that is well established, that has high levels of quality control, look for three letters, GMP, which
is good manufacturing practices, and so that means they make it under a certain level
of quality control. You're not going to find iron filings in there, and it probably has
the stuff in it that they say it does. But so that's all I can say right now.
I'm sure.
And something is going to be much more helpful.
But overall, make sure it's white, crystalline, NMN, and to me, it tastes like burnt popcorn.
You crack open the capsules and you'll take a little sample to make sure it tastes like
burnt popcorn.
Well, when I'm making my capsules, I'll taste it.
And I do a lot of quality control on the stuff that I take.
Do you take that gram all at once with the rest of the air at your all
or do you take it spread throughout the day?
It's all in the morning for those things.
So it's the, if I take midformin, it's anaman
and there is a very tall old together.
And there's a good reason for that.
It's all scientific. I try to be.
The levels of NAD go up in the morning in our bodies,
naturally, our bodies actually have a cycle of NAD.
It's not steady.
It's circadian.
It's circadian.
In fact, NAD controls your clock.
This was shown by Shin, M.I, and colleagues
in a nice science paper about a decade ago,
that if you disrupt the NAD cycle,
which is controlled by the Sir-2 and Jean that we worked on, that if you disrupt the NAD cycle, which is controlled by the
Sir Tuan gene that we worked on, that is what's telling your body, oh, it's time to eat,
it's time to go to sleep. And if you take the NMN late at night, for example, you can disrupt
your circadian rhythms. Interesting. Conversely, when I travel and I want to reset my clock to the time zone, I will take a boost of NMN in the
morning and I feel great. Does this protocol for you? Does it produce any immediate effects of
increased energy, etc? You mentioned that one would, if it's right for them,
would have to take it for at least two weeks to start to see the NAD levels increase. At that point when a NAD levels increase, could one possibly expect an increase
in overall energy, focus, etc. I realized we're not making promises here, but I'm just wondering
whether or not the only measure of whether or not this protocol is working is whether
or not you die at age, blank, or blank plus 20. And of course,
once you're dead, you can't really know if you would have lived longer if you'd done something
differently and vice versa. Sure. Well, there was a study again by Shinemi, my good friend at
Washington University in St. Louis, that showed that improves, remember, this insulin sensitivity,
which is a good thing.
But you can't know your insulin sensitivity unless you're measuring a glucose, have a glucose
monitor on your arm.
You have one on right now.
No.
No, I used to.
I learned a lot.
Yeah, last time I saw you had this thing, it looks like a small leech, not a large leech.
And it was measuring your blood glucose.
They're very informative because you've learned what your body reacts to and grapes were
really bad, run to Patrick agrees with that.
But the issue was, was what, where were we, Andrew?
The issue is whether or not you can expect any immediate effects on energy, vitality,
focus, any, just even subjective.
So what do you feel is the question, and anecdototally because I've been taking this for a long time
If I don't take it I start to feel 50 years old. It's horrible. I can't think straight
I it may may be placebo, but who knows
But what we're doing now are very careful clinical trials
We've done the safety for two years and we're now treating elderly patients at Harvard Medical School with some group wonderful colleagues
and those people are actually
going to be and currently in MRIs, so you can measure the energetics and the NAD levels in their
legs as they exercise in real time. And that will tell us if what we see in the mice, this increased
endurance actually works. In the meantime, it's fun to talk about anecdotes. I have a number of athlete friends,
some of which have increased their load their time in marathons, for example, as a good friend of us in our circle that is winning marathons at age 50 now, any attributes that to the protocol
that he's on. Interesting. I haven't started taking an amend, but I'm planning to do that when
my next birthday arrives, which is in a couple months.
But I do experiments on my sister and have for years, I have a sister who's
three years older than I am who is very enthusiastic about these protocols. And I'll tell you that after
reading your book, I started
purchasing for her and giving her an Anaman supplement. And she
claims, and I believe her,
she has a quite sensitive system
and she's very tuned into it,
she feels far and away better
when she takes it as opposed to when she doesn't.
And I've done the control experiment
of removing her supply and then giving it back
to her and this kind of thing.
So that's my other laboratory.
This is what younger brothers do to older sisters.
I have a question about something that if it has no relevance, we can just treat it as
a speed bump and then move right on.
The artificial sweeteners, these things that, or I should say, non-glucose increasing
sweeteners.
You've got stevia, which is a plant basically, and then you've got sucralose and aspartame
and all these things.
There are some evidence that, I know we're both aware of, they've been published in quite
reputable journals showing that they can disrupt the gut microbiome in certain cases, in
particular saccharin, the one that basically nobody uses anymore.
And it's questionable as to whether or not stevia has the same negative effects, et cetera.
That's not what this is about, but in terms of the sensation of,
or the perception of sweet taste, is that itself a possible detriment to
these pro-lawn Jevadi, for giving me for using the term that,
pathways, you know, if I were to drink a diet coke during a fast,
it might somehow disrupt in this.
And I'm asking this question because I get asked this question a lot.
Well, there may be small effects.
I don't think they're worth worrying about Joe Rogan
laughed at me because I was drinking a diet coke
during the first interview I'd do with him.
I will drink diet coke.
I've read those scientific literature.
And again, it's this 5% thing
that I think is blown out of proportion.
If I was to put a number on it, I would say if eating a high sugary meal or drinking a
sugar-filled soda, what is that?
30 grams of sugar.
Let's say that's a 10 out of 10 bad for you.
A diet coke might be a one.
And if I'm, you know, what you're
am I going to do, I could have a 10 or a one or go without in my life, I'll do
the one on occasion. I try to avoid them because I don't like the ones as
much. But you can't say that sucrose is equivalent to drinking a sugary
soda. There's just no comparison. And I think what is it?
Stevia. I do use stevia whenever I
can because it's a naturally sourced product and I haven't seen any good evidence yet that it's bad for
you. But I think a lot of this is is overblown and a lot of it's the media trying to give equal
weight to stories as you know as a scientist. It can be frustrating when something's a 10 and something's a 1, and they're equated.
How do I say this respectfully? I think if science journalists were required to post their credentials alongside their name,
then people would take the articles with an additional grain of salt, right? I mean, in other words, that I think that the science media is mainly generate around two specific goals. One is to make people very, very afraid
or get people very, very excited. And oftentimes, the get people excited part is sponsored content.
And I think that's overlooked. In any case, thank you for that. I want to talk about iron
and iron load. We were talking earlier about ferritin and of course women men's straight
and so their iron needs are greater than people men that don't men's straight or women that don't
men's straight. I don't think we can get right down into how much iron somebody needs because
you're a very person to person but I was surprised to learn that iron is actually going
to accelerate the aging process in various contexts.
Well, this is new finding.
I knew finding out of Spain, Manuel Sarono's lab has found
that excess iron will increase the number of senescent cells
in the body.
And senescent cells are the zombie cells that accumulate
as you get older and they sit there and they cause inflammation mainly and also can cause cancer.
And it's found that if you get rid of these cells or never accumulate them, you stay younger.
In animals, and there's some really interesting studies out of Mayo Clinic in humans as well.
studies out of Mayo Clinic in humans as well. So iron is a pro-sinescent metal. And so what I think is that if you're taking excess iron as a supplement, you're probably accelerating
your aging process. The other thing that I found really interesting is I've looked at hundreds
of thousands of people's metabolism and their blood biomarkers. I was one of the first people in inside
tracker as a board member and I'm still a scientific lead guy. So I can look
anonymously at hundreds of thousands of people's blood work and we also know
how fit they are, how old they are, some of them are marathon runners, some of
them are crossfit.
And there's a signature of health that actually is different than your average person.
Now I'm not going to say bad things about MDs because a lot of my best friends are MDs.
And I work with them at Harvard Medical School.
The issue though is that with MD training, there's a scale of what's normal,
and if you're out of that normal range,
something must be wrong.
That's the paradigm that they work under,
but first of all, everybody's different,
and you wanna know their baseline and track people
over years to know what's normal for them.
And what I find, for example, is people who are
really healthy and live the way I do
and have a diet that's fairly vegetarian but not strict.
Still have slightly low hemoglobin levels, slightly low iron, slightly low ferritin, but
we have super amounts of energy.
We're not anemic, and we're getting along with great in life.
But a doctor who just looks at that might say, oh, we need to give you more iron.
So what I'm getting at is an example of,
we need to personalize medicine
and look at people over the long run
to know what works for them and what's healthy for them
and not just work towards the average human
but work towards what's optimal for human.
I love that answer.
You mentioned tracking and tracking over time
and this is a really interesting area
that I know you have been focused on for a long time.
I've been getting blood work done about every six months
since I, frankly, since I was in college.
I just got, I like data.
And I got interested in supplementation and exercise
because it made me feel better,
but I also want to know what was going on under the hood.
So you get numbers back.
You get this hormone, that hormone,
this blood glucose measure, et cetera.
How do you make sense of the data?
I mean, what inside trackers doing a side?
How do you personally make sense of the data in ways
that might differ from the way that a standard MD
might look at one of these charts?
Because the standard practice is to say,
is it red, yellow, or green, right?
Is it basically too high or too low?
Is it somewhere close to the margins or are you okay?
Are you in these ranges?
Are there any things that you pay attention to that you think are particularly interesting
for people to just take note of?
I mean, we're not asking you to go against anybody's physician.
But what sorts of things should people start to educate
themselves about in terms of what these molecules are
on their charts that they choose to get them?
And what do you look at?
Yeah.
Well, there's a lot there.
The first is that you should be tracking things,
because one measurement isn't enough.
These things vary and over time.
And if you can have a decade or more of data,
it's super important, informative, as you know well know, as you know. So the physician, interestingly,
my physician, let's take him as an example. So he sees me, he says, how you feeling,
feeling great, okay, see you next year. That's craziness. Anyway, so I say, okay, stop.
Let's talk a little bit about, let me educate you.
That's what David tells us, if I said,
I imagine that like 12-year-old David Sinclair
says to a physician, listen,
let's have a different discussion.
Is that how it works?
It is.
He finds me pretty annoying as does my dentist,
but so I said, stop, hang on, I've got this data.
I've got the inside tracker data.
So I pull that up on the screen. And I'm showing in my, the changes in my cholesterol, in my
CRP, which is inflammatory markers, you know, and we're going through it. And you can see things change
over time. And I've corrected them as they go slightly out of the optimal range for me,
which is different than what he would do, of course.
But what was funny is that he says,
this is great.
I love this data, but I'm not allowed to get this
because of course the insurance companies won't pay for it.
So again, you can pay out of pocket.
It's not super expensive.
I would say if you save a bit of money on a coffee,
you can afford this kind of stuff.
But the main point is the doctors do like this data.
It's just that then unable to spend the money
on every one of their patients to get it.
Is there a code word that someone can use
with their physician that will trigger
a comprehensive blood test?
I keep trying to figure out what's the code
that one needs to ask or tell their doctor,
like I'm feeling blank so that they get
a full blood panel.
What about?
Well, you have to be hemorrhaging from the gut or something.
Well, I usually use the WTH method, which is what the hell.
And then he says, okay, we'll do it.
Interesting.
Because I think a lot of people out there are thinking, look, I'd love to have blood work
repeatedly over time.
But that's hard to get for financial reasons. But also a lot of
people just don't know how to approach the conversation. And this is one of the things that I hope that
we can educate people on, you know, that they deserve to know what's going on inside their body.
And that it makes the doctors visit worthwhile. And that you don't have to feign illness
in order to do it. Right. Yeah, and a lot of people do. So I would say if you can't afford these tests,
there are an increasing number of companies that offer these tests. Inside track, there is one of them.
And you just do it a couple of times a year at a minimum. And then you can share that with your
doctor. If you can't afford that, then I would say to your doctor, here are the main ones that
Andrew and David do. Yeah, we must.
And there's an email that is something like a phone number
rather, it's 555555.
I think if they have any complaints,
they can just call that number.
David will pick up on East Coast Business Hours.
And I'll pick up outside of those hours.
But there are some main ones.
I would say you're blood sugar levels.
You want to do your HBA one C, which
is your average glucose levels over the monk,
this CRP, which I mentioned for inflammation.
Let's talk about C-reactive protein for a second,
because I think it's been shown to be
an early marker of macular degeneration,
of heart disease, of a variety of different things.
CRP is something that we don't hear enough about, I think.
Maybe, what do you know about CRP that I don't?
I'm guessing a lot.
It was originally picked up as something that was associated with heart disease and the
framing him study, I believe.
It is the best mark of cardiovascular inflammation and is also, we use it as a predictor of longevity.
And its levels go up with mortality.
And so this is an association, but there's enough data
that I would say if you have high levels of CRP,
you need to get your levels down quickly.
And the levels usually go up with age
and with levels of inflammation.
So the ways to get it down would be to switch the diet,
eat less, try to eat more vegetables, you'll
find it will come down. There are also drugs that can do it, anti-inflammatories can do it as well.
But CRP is, it's actually HCRP, there's a high-sensitive HSCRP, your doctor will know,
get one of those readings because if you've got normal blood sugar levels, your doctor
or fasting blood sugar levels, your doctor fasting blood sugar levels, your
doctor might say you're fine.
But a lot of people have normal blood sugar but have high CRP, which is just as bad for
you long term and can predict a future heart attack.
Oh, it's a heart attack.
I want your thoughts on cholesterol and serum cholesterol and dietary cholesterol.
I can not for the life of, get my arms around this literature.
And even if I ignore all the, essentially, nonsense that's out there in
various social media groups,
I'm saying cholesterol is the worst thing in the world,
or cholesterol is not, or dietary cholesterol has nothing to do with Serum cholesterol,
and nothing to do with longevity. I can't seem to sort through the very basic data that essentially ask,
is having high levels of LDL going to kill me earlier, should I be striving to always reduce LDL
and increase HDL? Is that a reasonable goal? And if so, is dietary cholesterol the primary determinant
of that?
And just as a final point about this,
I am aware of quite good data that
shows that anorexics, people that essentially
know food unless you force them to,
can often have very high LDL.
So their dietary cholesterol is essentially zero zero and so they're manufacturing a lot
of their own. So realize this isn't your primary area of expertise, but you're a smart guy, you think
about this kind of stuff a lot. What do you think is going on with the cholesterol literature and will
we ever get to the bottom of this as a scientific and medical community? Because to me it is rather perplexing.
It is. But you can you can get through the politics. I know a fair bit about cholesterol because it's
in my family history and I was headed for an early death. My grandmother had a stroke of 30.
That's how bad I am in terms of my genetics. So I went on a statin and I know there are there's
a lot of people who say that statins long-term are bad.
It might dissociate it with Alzheimer's disease.
I've been taking a statin since I was 29,
and that's because I forced my same doctor
to give me the statin.
The conversation with something like this,
you're too young to be on a statin.
I said, what, you want me to have a heart attack
before you give me something?
Give it to me now.
So 29 have been on a statin.
And my cholesterol was way up beyond 300,
which is a massive mess.
Basically, my blood was creamy to look at.
So I've now got my cholesterol down to low, low levels
to what would it be?
You could check on the main side tracker,
but so my ratio of HDL to LDL,
which you wanna be less than five is now two,
and the LDL is below 100, so it's all good.
And I've measured my cardiovascular health
with an MRI, I got a movie of my heart beating.
I've still got a heart of a 20 year old.
So that's working.
I'm willing to forego the risk
that the statin is causing problems later
because of my family history.
But other people, I would say be aware that statin is on perfect drugs.
There are some interesting new ones.
There's one called the PSK9 inhibitor, which is, I think, fortnightly every two weeks injection
that blocks the release of LDL from the liver. And then that seems to be great for lowering cholesterol,
but also has other benefits that might be pro-longevity.
And there are some people that I was just talking to
are on the cutting edge of this.
And their doctors are trying them on this drug instead
of the statin.
So you could talk to your doctor about that.
Do you avoid dietary cholesterol for
that reason also? Red meat, butter. I mean, I have been to love butter. I love red meat. I
realize there's some people who don't. My cholesterol is a little bit high, but I'm working to bring
that down a bit, although not my altering my food intake yet. But what do you think is the
relationship between dietary cholesterol and serum cholesterol? And what do you think is the relationship between dietary cholesterol
and serum cholesterol? And what's going on with the liver, wire anerexics? Yeah.
You know, why is there a serum cholesterol so high when they're eating nothing?
Yeah. Well, there've been a number of papers over the years that have been ignored. And
our friend Peter Atia brought to my attention recently a new study that I think definitively said that dietary cholesterol has almost zero
impact on blood cholesterol levels.
Good.
Yeah.
So, I'm annoyed because I've been avoiding eggs and butter for most of my life and I didn't
have to.
So, I had eggs a long time, at least in your case.
Yeah, yeah.
So, that's the thing.
You can eat these foods that all ones banned,
because it's very difficult to take cholesterol up
into the body from the gut, and most of it's being synthesized
in the body.
Well, I'm just pausing every second
because I think that it's what we've been told.
Six meals a day, you know, eat a lot of grains and fruits and this kind of thing.
Avoid cholesterol. Basically everything we learned in the 80s and 90s and early 2000s is getting
flipped on its head now. But, and I think this is a very strong caveat that's important to mention,
is a very strong caveat that's important to mention, amino acids, in particular, the amino acids that come from animal products, right?
Seem to have some pro-aging effect on them, right?
At least the way that I've heard you describe the your diet.
Now, I'm somebody who enjoys meat, I like it. But, so I'm by no means a vegan at all.
But, I've heard you say you eat mostly plants,
but a little bit of fish or chicken
or something of that sort of eggs,
but is that specifically to avoid excessive amino acid intake
or is it something specific about plants
that excites you with respect to it?
I mean, vegetables are delicious too. But what is it? Is it something specific about plants that excites you with respect? I mean, vegetables are delicious too.
But what is it?
Is it something great about plants or is it something bad about when I think of meat,
I guess the biologists in me thinks amino acids, right?
I don't think top-sirtle one, I think amino acid.
I think top-sirtle one has a meeting it, but really what they are are amino acids, including
loosing.
Yeah.
Well, there are two good things about plants, and neither of them is taste for me.
I would eat steak all the time if I could.
I did when I was a kid.
I'm an Australian.
But plants have two benefits.
One is that they're highly nutritious, and they'll give you a lot of the vitamins and
nutrients that I need.
I don't take a multivitamin.
I don't want to have the excess iron in my body.
So there's that high density nutrition.
So those dark leaves, if it's a spinach salad, great.
The second is that there is what's called
xenohrometic molecules in plants.
That term xenohrmesis is a term that I came up with
with my friend Conrad Howitz, which means
stressed plants make molecules that benefit your health.
I'll break it down.
Xeno means between species and hormesis is the term whatever doesn't kill you makes you
stronger and live longer.
And the idea is that when plants are stressed out, think of a grapevine that's dried out
and they're starting to harvest the grapes,
which is typically how it's done.
They are full with resveratrol
because resveratrol is a plant-defense molecule
that I think is made to activate those sort of genes
in a plant.
So plants have sort of two and it's just like we do.
But by purefying or at least concentrating
in a light-proof bottle and keeping it out of the air,
we stabilize this xeno-harmetic molecule, or it's a cocktail, not just one, there's others in wine.
We then ingest those and get the benefits of activating our own defenses because our food
was getting stressed out. And by stress, I don't mean psychologically stressed, I mean biologically
stressed. And so I try to eat plants that have gone through a bit of stress.
They might be brightly colored.
They've had too much sun or got nibbled on by a caterpillar.
So you go to places where it's organic or it's fresh, local.
And those are the plants that aren't perfect.
And they probably have high concentrations of these molecules.
And in addition, I also buy the supplements to make sure I'm getting enough of those as
well.
Which supplements mimic that?
Well, so Resvertral will there's another one called Christiton, or Christiton, some people call it,
which you find in Trace amount in apples and onions.
And we also showed back in 2003 that it activates their two ends as well.
But others have, 20 years later, found that it kills senescent cells, or helps kill senescent cells.
So, it's a double whammy with that molecule.
And are you actively picking out the peaches that look like they were nibbled on by a caterpillar?
No, but I don't worry if they've been banged up a bit.
What's the story with antioxidants?
Are they of any value whatsoever?
Because the way that you describe them at the beginning and what I've heard recently
is that they are not all the rage for anti-aging.
What are they doing that's useful?
Should we be seeking out anti-oxidants anyway for other cellar health purposes?
Well, yeah, anti-oxidants are not going to hurt you unless you take megasus.
We do need some oxidants for our immune system, and there's even what's called myto-horomesis,
which is your mitochondria power packs need to have a little bit of these free radicals
to be able to function.
So you don't want to overdose on these antioxidants, vitamin C, vitamin E, don't overdose,
overdo it.
You don't take a multivitamin correct. Right. I think I'm going to stop
after this conversation because I've always just taken one for the kind of insurance purpose,
which is a stupid purpose, not actual insurance, but just thinking, oh, you know, I'll top off
on my ACBD and I'll pee out what I don't need. Yeah, sure. That never bothered me. The whole
expensive pee thing never got that's a that's a that argument never got me because of that. A good vitamin is not that expensive. I
just figured better safe than sorry, but it may be that it's detrimental. Well, it can
in the case of iron as we discussed in the antoxidants. So when I came into the aging
field in the early 1990s, it was all about antioxidants. We thought that enzymes by the name of catalyze
and superoxide dismutase, whether it's going to be the key to longevity, it turns out that
it's largely been a failure, that giving animals and humans antioxidants haven't had the longevity
benefits that we dreamed of. And the main reason is that there's a lot more going on
than just free radical damage.
The epigenome gets disrupted.
We've got these proteins misfolding.
So the problem really has been that we didn't realize
that you need to turn on the body's natural defenses
against that plus a whole host of other things
to get the true benefits.
But I'm not going to say it's a problem taking in an antioxidant drink.
Pomegranate juice for one is full of good stuff, including xenochromatic molecules.
But resveratrol is a good case in point, which is when I worked on resveratrol as a longevity
molecule, first we showed it in yeast and worms and flies and mice. Before that, it was thought that Resveratrol was good for your heart in red wine when you
drink red wine because it's an antioxidant.
Then we showed that it extended the lifespan of yeast cells through this genetic pathway,
the serotones.
We then tested whether as Veratrol, if we changed one atom to make it not an antioxidant,
guess what, it still worked fine. So it wasn't its antioxidant activity that was extending lifespan.
It was its ability to turn on the yeast's defenses against aging. Conversely, when we gave the
yeast antioxidants, they looked shorter. So yeah, that was the beginning of my transformation
into thinking, turn on the body's defenses, don't give it the antioxidants.
This is an opportunity for me to say something
I've been wanting to say for a long time,
which is that what's so wonderful about science
is that because the goal is mechanism,
you can really start to understand as you just described
what actually mediates a process
is very different than what modulates a process.
I mean, a fire alarm goes off in the building right now, it's going to modulate our attention.
That doesn't mean that it controls our attention. It's not mechanistically relevant.
And so I think this thing about antioxidants is one of these cases, it sounds like where
it's in the right ballpark, but until one really unveils the mechanism as you have, you can be
one can or a field can be badly wrong
for a very long period of time.
And it sounds like the certunions
are really getting down to the guts of the machinery
of what causes cells to age is really what it's about.
Zooming way out, what are the behavioral tools
that one can start to think about in terms of ways to modulate
these, you know, basically the way that DNA is being expressed and functioning?
I've heard you talk before about hormisis of other sorts, cold exposure.
We talked about fasting.
We talked about exercise in broad terms, but what about any evidence if it exists as to whether or not aerobic training
versus weight training, these sorts of things?
In other words, what are the sorts of things that people can do to improve the Sertuan pathway?
And I realize that they're caveats.
We can't go directly from a behavior disorder to Sertuan, but in the general theme, what
can people do?
What do you do?
Right.
Well, we know that aerobic exercise in mice and rats
raises their an 80 levels and their levels of certain,
one of the genes goes up to actually number one and number three.
What we don't know yet is what type of exercise
is optimal to get them to change.
We will learn, we're doing work.
Now it's revealed that we're doing work, now it's revealed that
we're doing work with the military in the US to try and understand that kind of thing.
And I'll always tell you and the public when I don't know something, I'm not going to extrapolate.
But what do I do? I base my exercise on the scientific literature, which has shown
that maintaining muscle mass is very important for a number of reasons.
The two main ones are you want to maintain your hormone levels. I'm an older male losing my
testosterone and muscle mass over time. By exercising, I will maintain that and have. In fact, I've
probably haven't had a body like this since I was 20. So that's one of the benefits of having
this lifestyle.
Sorry to interrupt you. You know, we did an episode on hormones and there are data in humans that
show that there are some males in their 80s and 90s where their testosterone is equivalent to the
average of 25 and 30 roles. I can get you that information. It is really impressive studies.
Unfortunately, they didn't include
a lot of information about the lifestyle factors, etc. But this idea that testosterone goes
down with age, it might be the trend, but it's not necessarily a prerequisite.
Right. I believe in naturally increasing and maintaining these hormone levels. And I've
been measuring them for a long time. And I could see, for me, my testosterone levels were steadily levels
were going down. And then you got tenure and they went back up again. No. I actually became
complacent. And it was the worst, actually. My age changed in the wrong direction after
that because I was relaxed. Interesting relaxed and not worried about the future.
But then I got serious,
and actually according to the inside
Dr. Algaro, I've got my age down from 58 to 31
in a matter of months.
That was a big drop,
and I've been getting steadily younger over the last 10 years
according to that measurement, the blood tests.
What about estrogen?
Because women are different in the sense that they do, the number of eggs that measurement, the blood tests. What about estrogen? Because women are different in the sense that they do,
the number of eggs that they,
and the ovaries, change over time, right?
Do you think that they can maintain estrogen levels
that in over longer periods of time
using some of these same protocols?
Well, yeah, I get into trouble
from a certain university when I talk about this too much
about estrogen, just about astrogen. Just about fertility
and long story. If I don't want to get too much into the anecdotes, but I'll tell you the science,
which is that if you take a mouse and put it on fasting or caloric restriction,
form up until the point where it should be infertile.
So that's about it at a year of age, a mouse gets infertile female mouse due to fasting
or due to simply to aging.
No, due to aging.
No, due to aging.
The fasting, it's not an extreme fast, it's just less calories.
Got it.
Then you put them back on a regular food and they become fertile again for many, many
months afterwards.
So the effect on slowing down aging is also on the reproductive system.
Interesting.
And so that I wouldn't say to any woman, I wouldn't think that they should become super
skinny to try and preserve fertility.
That's not what I'm saying.
But these pathways that we work on, these sorttuins, are known to delay infertility
in female animals. Case in point, I'm one of the lead authors on a paper where we used
NMN. Remember, this is the gas, the fuel, the petrol for the sertuins. We gave old mice.
One group of mice was 16 months old. Remember, they came in fertile at 12, gave them an amen, and I think it was only
six weeks later, they had offspring. They became fertile again, which goes against biology,
a textbook biology, which is that female mammals run out of eggs. Turns out that's not true. You can
rejuvenate the female reproductive system and even get them to come out of
mouse oppose as we call it.
So that's a whole new paradigm in biology as well.
That's super interesting.
I'm sorry to interrupt you, but I'm reminded by a set of studies that were done by your
former colleagues, as they're no longer there, David Hewwell and Torrance and Weasel, my
scientific great-grandparents, won the Nobel Prize for discovering what are called critical periods. This phase of early
development when the brain is extremely plastic. A big part of their work was to show that
after a certain point, the critical period shuts down, essentially the brain can't change
or not nearly as much. Then people came along later and showed that you could open up
these critical periods again, but very briefly. and it takes a very specific stimulus, essentially.
High degrees of focus, etc.
However, there's a well-known phenomenon in this literature where if you take an animal
and to some degree, this is being shown in humans as well, and you let them pass through
the critical period.
But then you essentially sensory deprive them.
You take away experience, you close both eyes.
You essentially reopen the critical period.
So it seems like I couldn't help but mention that there's this parallel between what we're
talking about here with fertility and neuroplasticity where yes, there's a timer where certain things
are available to the organism early in life,
and then they tend to taper off. It's not an open-in-shop, but they taper off.
But then a deprivation can actually reactivate the availability of that process. Forgive me,
I just couldn't help but mention it. But to me, both of those things are associated
with youth, fertility and neuroplasticity. And so I think that it'd be so interesting.
I'd love to collaborate with you on this to explore how neuroplasticity might actually
be regulated by these things like the Sertunns.
Right.
And the Sertunns do control memory in neurons as well.
So what I think is really interesting is that what we're learning from work that you and
your colleagues have done and in my life as well, is that the body
has remarkable powers of healing and recovering
from illness and injury.
And what we once thought was a one-way street
and you just can't repair, you can't get over these diseases,
you can reset the system.
And the body can really get rejuvenated in ways
that in the future we're underweighted,
widening we work on this earlier. The future of humanity is more like us walking around like Deadpool.
We'll probably be cleaner and we won't smell as badly, but Deadpool, if you don't know,
can get injured and just recover. It's very hard to injure this guy. And we're going to
be the same. There are many species you cut off the limb, the limb grows back.
Salamanders, yeah.
We are now learning how to tap into that system.
And in part, what we're doing is reversing the age of those cells and telling them how
to read the genes correctly again, reversing the age of that epigenome.
And we do that.
The cells, the brain, for instance, are the skin.
We did the optic nerve.
Now, let's talk about those results for a second.
And then I want to make sure that we returned to some of these behavioral protocols. You have this amazing paper at the end of last year, cover article, full article in nature, showing that essentially a small menu of transcription factors, which control gene expression, et cetera, could essentially reverse the age of neurons
in the eye and rescue those cells against damage, essentially allow blind mice to see again,
and offset degeneration of these retinal cells.
Incredible paper and such a boon to the field.
Where does that stand now in terms of human clinical trials?
I mean, what are you envisioning in terms of the trajectory of those data from mice into
human someday?
Right.
Well, to get to the point immediately, we're going to be testing the treatment on monkeys
just for safety reasons. And then the first patient should be done
sometime in 2022, early 2023, and we're going to try to recover blindness.
This involves making an injection of a virus into the eye, right? Right now there's no way
that I am aware of to manipulate these transcription factors through a pill or some other.
That's why we work on in my lab at Harvard right now.
So it will be a whole-
It will be a solution of transcription.
Well, the apopipill in the whole body gets rejuvenated by 20 years.
That's what we're aiming for.
Now we do it with gene therapy in the eye and other places.
So in the eye, yes, it's a single injection.
The genes go into the retina and we can turn it on with a drug called
doxycycline. And we do that in the mice for four to eight weeks.
Then the eye gets younger, we can measure that because we can measure the clock.
And then the vision comes back in those mice. And I don't see any reason why it
shouldn't work in people because it's the same structures and mechanisms that
are on in the human as well. Now, the N-1 injection.
It's well.
As you mentioned, injections into the eye, obviously nobody should do this outside of an
ophthalmology clinic, and they are definitely by an ophthalmologist.
But the injections into the eye are painless if done correctly by the right person.
It sounds dreadful, but it's actually, I've seen it done hundreds of times.
I've done it thousands of times, and it's not to myself, but to other creatures. And there's a way
of doing this, it's completely painless to the person. It's a tiny, tiny needle too. But the great
thing about this is that it's a one-time treatment. Those genes go into the back of the eye and stay
there forever, and you can just turn them on whenever you want.
So what we found is you can turn them on in the mice, they get their vision back, and
then you turn it off again, and so far many months out, the benefit has remained.
But if it does decline, we'll just turn it back on and reset the system, rinse and repeat.
So one day, what's exciting is that we could potentially do this across the entire body and just take this antibiotic every five years and go back time and time again.
And thinking about the body and what's going on under the hood. I'm amazed
still that there isn't a simple
affordable technology that would allow me to just look into my body and see whether or not there any tumors growing anywhere.
I mean, it's not that hard to look into the body.
I mean, that the technology exists.
Why hasn't anybody created an at-home or pseudo-at-home solution like a clinic where you can go and
pay 50 bucks or 100 bucks and see if you have any tumors growing in your body?
Yeah, it's still expensive.
You can get your doctor to try to get you in.
There's some companies that offer blood tests that look at circulating DNA that will measure it.
We're getting there.
It's still probably five to ten years away from being really cheap.
You can do things like a colon cancer test at home.
I think it's a hundred and something dollars.
You ship off your ship, excuse my language, and they measure it.
And they tell you if you've got colon cancer,
with high probability, I did that during the pandemic because I didn't want to get a colonoscopy.
Is it more accurate or as accurate as a colonoscopy? I believe it's close to being as accurate.
The downside is that during a colonoscopy, they can pinch off the polyps that are looking
dangerous, whereas this obviously isn't that. But it's certainly easier to do.
And my father, who's a Australian, tells me that it's free for Australians.
They get this test routinely.
Interesting.
I want to return to the topic that I took us away from.
So I apologize, which is behavioral protocols.
Do you regularly do the cold shower thing, ice baths, cold water swims, or even to that whole biz?
Well, you do know that I've done it at least once because we did it together. That's right. Not the same bath just to be very clear.
Same sauna, different ice bath. The idea of Sinclair and Hubert been taking an ice bath together is it might warm some people's hearts,
but just to be very clear, same ice bath,
different times.
Yeah, thank you for clarifying.
I don't do them regularly.
I do try to sleep cool.
I sleep better anyway.
I try to dress without a lot of warm clothes.
I'm here in a t-shirt, it's middle of summer,
but in winter I'll try to wear a t of warm clothes. I'm here in a t-shirt. It's middle of summer, but in winter,
I'll try to wear a t-shirt too. So you're challenging your system to thermal regulate.
Right. Right. I've got this hypothesis with Ray Cronus. We published what's called the metabolic
winter hypothesis, which is a few tens of thousands of years ago, we were either hungry or cold
or both, and we really experienced that now. And so we try to give ourselves the metabolic winter.
And part of the problem, I think,
with the obesity epidemic is that we're never cold.
And cold, when you're cold, you have to burn energy.
It may be only slightly, but over the whole night,
if you're a little bit cool, you'll actually
expend more energy.
So I try to do that.
But I'm not a big fan of cold showers.
The sauna, I don't have access to my gym
as much as I did. But I do want to get back into it. I used to do it regularly with my son,
and I posted on Instagram once, that he could stay in there for 15 minutes, and I could only
stay in for about three. Anyway, long story short, I try to compensate with changes in my
diet and exercise until I get back into it.
You reminded me of something that I meant to ask earlier
that obesity reduces NAD levels and accelerates aging.
How?
I mean, okay, so again, this is the scientist in us,
so someone's carrying a lot of excess adipose tissues,
subcutaneous and visceral fat.
But why should that reduce NAD in any ways that are independent of effects
on glucose and insulin?
If there's something direct about white adipose tissue, and the reason I ask this is not
simply to dig into mechanism alone, but I think there are really interesting data now that
fat actually gets neural innervation.
It's not just stored
fuel. It's stored fuel that's acting as an endocrine organ, essentially. So, yeah, why
would being fat make people age faster?
Yeah, that's a question that is so obvious, but so few people ask it. That's what makes
you a good scientist. And so that we don't know, but I'll
give you my best answer, which is that obesity comes along with a lot of problems that include
a lot of senescent cells. In fact, if you stain old fat for senescent cells, it lights up.
And when you kill off those cells, at least in mice, and maybe in humans, it looks like
the fat is less toxic to the body, because those senescent least in mice, and maybe in humans it looks like the fat is less
toxic to the body, because those senescent cells in the fat are secreting these inflammatory
molecules that will accelerate aging as we know no.
You talk about the SOTUans in NAD, so if we just look philosophically at why this would
be, the SOTUes only like to come on
or get activated when the body needs is under adversity.
And if a cell is surrounded by fat
or contains a lot of fat, it's gonna think
times are good, doesn't need to switch on.
So that's the evolutionary argument.
Mechanistically, we don't know,
but it could have something to do with the response
to glucose,
which then responds to the sirtoine gene.
But that hasn't been worked out very well.
And is there any evidence that leptin, this hormone from fat, can actually interact with
the sirtoine pathway?
I don't recall seeing that.
Maybe I could do a sabbatical in your lab, and that'd be a fun one.
Definitely.
Because leptin during development is what triggers the permission
for the hypothalamus to enter puberty, right?
This is why kids that eat a lot
when they're young and get overweight
will also start to go undergo puberty more quickly.
Although they have reproductive issues later.
Yeah, we should study the hypothalamus together
because the hypothalamus can control the aging of the body,
the most interesting part of the brain.
For sure.
Yeah, absolutely.
If you turn on the sort one gene, the sort two in gene that we work on in the hypothalamus
that actually will extend lifespan, also it's been shown by Dongsheng Kai at Albuhran
San College of Medicine that if you inhibit inflammation in the hypothalamus in a mouse,
it will increase or maintain the expression
of what's called GNRH, which is the hormone that he found actually controls longevity in the
mouse in part. And so keeping inflammation down in the hypothalamus is sufficient to extend the
lifespan of animals. And I reviewed that paper for nature about seven years ago. And that was the
first demonstration that the hypothalamus is one of the leading regulators
of the body's age.
I find this fascinating.
GNRH, for those of you that don't know,
actually comes from neurons in the hypothalamus
that then literally reached down
into the pituitary and trigger the release
of all the things that control fertility,
luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, et cetera.
It's such a powerful set of neurons and it's never really been clear what at a
behavioral level triggers the release of GNRH.
There's all the stories about pheromones and timers and puberty, et cetera,
but environmental conditions and dietary conditions and behaviors that can
control GNRH release, I think is an incredible area for exploration.
I've loved to do that, it's a medical, by the way.
I have a couple seemingly random questions,
but I can't help but ask, because one thing I like to do
is forage the internet for practices that at least more than a few people are doing,
and then wonder whether or not there's any basis for it.
You mentioned methylation as a detrimental process,
the way it disrupts the epigenome,
the CD reader, so to speak.
There are people out there who are ingesting
methylene blue.
And when I was a kid, I used methylene blue
to clean my fish tank.
And I love fish tanks.
I know you're into Aquaria also.
A different podcast episode.
Talk about Aquaria, but why in the world
would people ingest methylene blue?
It meaning is their logic correct?
And, or is that a dangerous practice?
I'm not sure I'd wanna ingest methylene blue.
Sounds not like a bad thing to do.
It stains your body, you've seen.
Yeah, when we would,
but yeah, there was was someone in my lab
as a post-doc was using it to study a completely different
process related to the blood brain barrier
and used to inject into animals and they would turn blue.
But then again, people ingest colloid silver,
you know, they'll put in there,
there's this, please people don't do this.
Or if you do, don't tell me,
because I won't like it.
They people put it in their eyes, and some people actually stain their skin.
They actually become kind of a silver, purple, brown color if they do it excessively.
I mean, there's a lot of crazy stuff out there.
But what do you think they're thinking with this methaline blue thing, or should we just
get them to a good psychiatrist? I don't know for sure.
I think Kathleen Blue was found to extend the lifespan of some lower organism and that's
where it came from.
My recollection with the emphasis on lower organisms.
Yes, smaller organisms.
I think, doesn't, do you remember Andrew, does it interrupt or interfere with mitochondrial
activity and that's why I like doing it. Yeah.
We need to look this up and post it.
OK.
We'll get to the bottom of this.
But those methods, let's talk about those.
Those methods have to be placed on the right part
of the genome.
They get attached to the right genes and the wrong genes.
And if you have a lot of methylation,
it's going to mess up the epigenome.
Smoking will do that, lack of exercise, all that good stuff.
So what you actually want to do is you
want to measure it and make sure what you're doing
with your body is working.
How do you know that if you do this or that is actually
helping?
And so you can test your age.
I could take a swab from your mouth
and tell you how old you are biologically.
And then we could work on trying to bring that down.
And actually, there are anecdotes now that people are reversing
their age by a decade or more, just by doing some of the things
that we've talked about and some other cutting-edge stuff
that I'm going to write about.
But yeah, but you have to measure stuff.
That's, I didn't want to forget to bring that up
I'm measuring stuff all the time I have
Blood tests like you. I've got this monitor that stuck to my chest right now that's measuring myself a thousand times a second And I measure my biological age. What's it measuring a thousand times a second?
Oh, yeah, yeah, so this little device is stuck here and it's for two weeks that you just recharge it or send it back and get new on.
It's got body temperature, movement, heart rate variability.
It's an FDA-approved device.
It's not a toy.
It's not one of these recreational things.
It also listens to my voice.
Eventually, tell me if I need a psychiatrist or if I'm depressed.
It will tell me how I sleep, obviously.
But when you put all that data together
and it's individualized and anonymized,
it can now tell my doctor in real time
if I've got a cold that needs an antibiotic
or it's just a virus if I am suffering from COVID-19
or even if I'm gonna have a heart attack next week. And so these little devices are going to be with us all the time
instead of going to your doctor once a year, which is ludicrous.
I have to ask you about X-rays because every time I go through the scanner at the airport,
I think Sinclair would never do this. And the argument I heard you give about this before
was a really excellent one, which is that,
you know, it's a low level amount of radiation going through with the airport, but the argument is always, well, it's just as much as on the plane and your argument, your counter argument, I should
say, was, well, then why would I want to do both? Right? Why would? So when you go to the airport,
assuming you're not running late and you have to go through the standard line
What do you say to them?
And do you say I'm David Sinclair and then they
Shuttle you to your own line. What do you say you do say? I don't like this thing. Do you have to give them a reason?
No, you don't you can say I don't want this and they'll get annoyed because it's
Hard for them to pat you down, but you get a pat down and you're done. As long as you're not in a hurry, it's fine. If you want to pay for the TSA pre in
America or the way to get around those scanners, you can do that. So I travel a lot. So it's
worth it anyway. But I just go through the metal detector. I don't get scanned.
And the metal detector doesn't have the same problem. What about X-rays at the dentist?
Well, you know, one X-ray is not going to kill you, two is not going to kill you,
but I'm going to kill you. No, I'm just kidding. I try to limit it because it's cumulative.
Right. And I went for six years without having a dental X-ray,
and then my last visit, I just gave up. I was tired of arguing with my dentist.
So they gave me one, but they've got lead coats on and they put little over your body. That's telling you something, right? There.
And finally enough, my teeth hadn't changed. Now, you could balance that by saying, well,
one X-ray, two X-ray, three X-rays is worth it if I have cavities. And that's true. You
want to know it's in there. But doing it regularly for me, I don't think
was worth it because my teeth are in perfect health and I've always been, don't have any
cavities, didn't have braces. They're fine. So stop scanning me. I mean, I know you have
to pay for the machine, but do I have a choice? Yes. So stop pressuring me.
You know, who shared your sentiments about X-rays and the dentist in general, my apologies
to the dentist out there, was the great physicist Richard Feynman.
This is a story about him that's not especially well-known, but he had very serious concerns,
health concerns about X-rays because he understood the physics, he understood enough biology
that he was actually quite vocal about his dislike of dental technology and
it's dangers.
And he talked about some of that.
People can find that on the internet if they like.
Speaking of people who are like Feynman who have been engaged in public discourse about
science, one of the things that I appreciate about you in fact, the way that you and I initially
came to know one another is through your public health education efforts. So obviously,
we're doing this podcast. You've done the Joe Rogan podcast, Lex Friedman podcast, excuse
me Lex. I'm still adjusting that. Lex Friedman podcast, many other podcasts, written an amazing book. What are you thinking these days
in terms of what the world needs in terms of education from scientists, education from
MDs, education in general as it relates to these things? Because I think if nothing else 2020
revealed to us that there's a gap.
There's a gap in understanding and that the scientists too are guilty of not knowing what to do with all the information that's out there on PubMed or elsewhere.
I'm just, you know, what are you thinking for yourself?
And in general, I'd like to just know, what do you think the world needs there?
Maybe we can recruit some more public educators. Yeah.
Well, we've gone from a time when you and I were in college
and young professors, where the only way to get our voice out
to the public was either through a newspaper
or a very short radio interview, which for me was extremely
frustrating, because particularly the newspapers and my topic,
every time was twisted into something that was not just embarrassing, but Harvard University used
to bring me into the back office and start a real time. How did you say such a thing? We're all
going to live to 100. I didn't say that. So we're now also in a world where we're overwhelmed with
information, and most of it is wrong and
anyone can pretend to be an expert.
So we've gone from early days to now, the future, and we're experiencing it right now, thanks
to guys like you, people like you, is that the experts, some experts, a small number who
are brilliant and good communicators are talking directly to the public. This has never been able to be possible
until this time right now.
So another five years from now,
and certainly by 10 years,
I would hope that there are trusted sources of information
of people who can not just communicate the ideas directly,
but are able to talk about things that are going on that
aren't even published yet to say, here's what's really going on. And this is what the
future looks like. But this is somebody like yourself who's spent their whole life studying
a particular topic and knows what they're talking about. And this is also something that
I think most people don't know, that we scientists, if
we tell a lie, we burst into flames. We absolutely cannot tell something that's untrue. And to
the best of our knowledge, we say it as it is, because if we don't, we're beaten up.
And we, or we kicked out of the university. So the people who survived to our age, and
I'm a little older than you, so I've survived a bit longer.
But a lot younger inside.
Now, we have to measure you with my point of view.
Yeah, we need to.
I probably need a little help, hopefully not too much.
We'll measure that, and we'll work on your eating.
But this is really, really important, is that finally, people like you are allowed by our
universities to talk to the public.
I used to do it with a real threat to my survival.
People would look at me, always a salesman,
he's promoting this and that.
We've seen as a real negative.
But finally, I think we're in a world
where it's not negative anymore.
And the pandemic showed that we need
to voice as a reason, voice as a fact that you could trust.
And you can see the popularity of your podcast
shows that the public are desperate for facts
that they can trust because they don't know what to believe anymore.
Well, I am being completely honest when I say this that, you know, I followed your lead.
I saw you on the Joe Rogan podcast and my job dropped.
I was like, this is amazing.
Like this, because he had had other good scientists on before, but you're,
you know, tenor professor Harvard genetics, department of genetics, and for those of you don't know,
there's the Harvard and of course Harvard medical school, and they're both excellent, of course,
but these are the top top tiers of academia, and I certainly understand what it takes to get
there and survive there and to thrive there. It's like a game of pinball. You never win. You just get to, if you're doing
really well, you get to keep playing. That's the truth in academia. And if you're not, you
stop playing basically. But when I saw you explain what you were doing in a way that was accessible
to people and also talking about possible protocols that they might explore for themselves to see if those were right for them.
I was just dazzled and excited and I made every effort to get in contact with you and
the rest is history.
But I think what's really exciting to me these days is because of 2020 and everything
that's happened and it continues to happen, there's a thirst for knowledge. There's also this direct to the public route that you mentioned.
And I think there's also an openness, I love your thoughts on this, but it seems to me that there's
an openness from the general public about health practices, that there are actually things that people can do to control
their stress level, to control their sleep, to control their cholesterol, if that's what they
need to do, maybe they don't, and to even control their lifespan, which I think is remarkable.
And, you know, I know I speak on behalf of so many people when I just, I want to say thank you,
truly change the course of my life.
I would not be sitting here doing this,
where it's not for your example.
And I always say, Sinclair,
many people have written books, many academics
have written books as you have,
but in terms of doing podcasts
and really getting out there with your message
in a way that I have to assume raised your cortisol level
and heart rate just a little bit,
but you did it nonetheless.
You were truly first man in and that deserves a nod
and I have a great debt of gratitude to you for that.
So thank you so much.
Thank you, Andrew.
You've become a good friend and I'm super proud
of what you've done and what you,
I know what you will do.
So in addition to your book and your presence
on social media, Instagram and Twitter
and appearances on podcasts,
recently I've noticed that you've opened up
a sort of an email slash website that people can ask,
access, excuse me, to get some information
about their own health and rates of aging.
Tell us about that and what's being measured
and what is this test that you've been working on?
Secretly and now soon not so secretly.
Yeah, well, what I want is a credit score for the body
to make it easy for people to follow their health.
And there is a number, there's a biological age
that you can measure.
Unfortunately, the test is many hundreds of dollars right now.
But in my lab, we've been able to bring that down a lot.
And so I want to democratize this test
so that everybody has access to a score
for their health that can predict not just their future,
health and time of death, but to change it.
And I'm building a system that will point people
in the right direction and give them discounts
for certain things that will improve,
not just their health now, but 10, 20, 30 years into the future.
And we can measure that and very cheaply keep measuring it
to know that you're on the right track.
Because if you don't measure something, you can't optimize it.
And so this is the biological age test.
We've developed it.
It's a simple mouth swab.
We're rolling it out.
We're building the system right now.
And there is a sign up sheet,
because a lot of people want to get in line.
Go to doctorsinclair.com.
You can get on that,
and you'll be one of the first people in the world
to get this test and see what we're doing.
Oh fantastic.
Will people be celebrating their biological age birthdays?
In other words, if I'm minus,
like if I could imagine,
so I'm 45 right now, soon to be 46,
but if I were to be so lucky
as to get my biological age to 35 within 12 months,
maybe you can help me do that,
do I get to celebrate a negative birthday?
Absolutely.
And my plan is that those people
who take their age back a year or more,
we think we can
go back 20 years.
Eventually, they'll get a birthday card from me and it's a negative birthday card.
I love it.
And probably a very little actual birthday cake being ingested, but who cares?
Because you're living that much longer.
Well, it's full of stevia.
That'll be fine.
And thank you for talking to us today.
I realize I took us down deep into the guts of mechanism
and as well talking about global protocols,
everything from what one can do and take
if they choose, that's right for them,
to how to think about this whole process
that we talk about when we talk about lifespan,
as always, and incredibly illuminating.
Thank you, David.
Thanks, Andrew.
Thank you for joining me for my conversation with Dr. David Sinclair.
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I've seen these episodes.
They are phenomenal and you're going to learn a tremendous amount about aging and how to
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