Posts

Restricting Protein or Certain Amino Acids Helps Burn Fat

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Recently, many social media influencers have been focusing on studies that surprisingly show how limiting protein in the diet leads to increased calorie burning, usually compensated by higher carbohydrate or fat intake. This is a very interesting area of research, with many unanswered questions.   The most frequently cited study was conducted on young, lean men. The results were highly surprising, hence the attention.   FGF21 is the primary factor behind the positive effects of restricting protein to around 9% of calories To maintain the same weight, caloric intake had to be significantly increased. This is related to energy expenditure through thermogenesis.  LPHC: Low-protein, high-carb diet; LPHF: Low-protein, high-fat diet;  HPD: Diet with standard protein content Is this practically applicable? Does it carry any risks? These questions still need to be answered. We don’t know. But we have other studies. For example, a recent study linked protein or bran...

Vinegar/Acetate Protects Your Blood Vessels Activating Antioxidant Protection.

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I’ve discussed the inner lining of blood vessels — the endothelium — several times before. Virtually all studies conclude that oxidative stress causes metabolic and functional changes in these critically important cells that protect your vasculature. We already know that turbulent blood flow in vessel branches and bends triggers oxidative stress . That stress can also cause cellular senescence and reduce adaptability to changing conditions. This impairs oxygen and nutrient delivery and blocks angiogenesis — the formation of new blood vessels. Vasodilation — the ability of vessels to expand based on tissue needs — also stops working. Maintaining functional vascular endothelium is therefore vital. Let’s look at a study that examined endothelial cells in two states: a seemingly quiescent one where cells are just working, and a proliferative one where new blood vessels form. The quiescent state is different from cellular senescence, though they may appear similar. Quiescent endothelial ce...

Cellular Senescence Arises from Temporary SIRT1 Inactivity During Fat Cell Differentiation

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I found a very interesting study linking the activity of deacetylase SIRT1 to cellular senescence in fat cells. It beautifully connects the effect of acetic acid/acetate in suppressing fat cell senescence and promoting healthy fat storage . Increasingly, we see that phenomena we consider negative are actually highly adaptive responses to specific conditions and are, in fact, beneficial. I’ve previously demonstrated this with insulin resistance . The same applies to weight gain — efficient fat storage is advantageous and does not cause obesity . On the contrary, impaired fat storage leads to weight gain. This results in permanent insulin resistance caused by senescent cells. Surprising, isn’t it? SIRT1 deacetylase protects against cellular senescence in differentiated cells during the differentiation phase. If we accept that occasionally storing energy reserves for periods of scarcity is beneficial, then safely depositing excess available calories into adipose tissue is a vital adaptat...

What Does Vinegar/Acetate Do Under Hypoxia — That Is, Oxygen Deficiency?

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I’ve written about the effects of vinegar/sodium acetate many times here — usually in a positive light. I’ve also frequently noted that adding HIF-1α  to search queries often leads to very interesting studies. In my previous post, I explored the idea that combining vinegar, for instance, with overeating might lead to obesity — perhaps a healthier or less dangerous form than without vinegar. Acetate, produced by gut bacteria in the presence of excess polyunsaturated oils, facilitates the creation of new fats from acetate, glucose and amino acids by increasing insulin secretion. Today, we’ll look at a study that goes even further. It shows that, under oxygen-deprived conditions, cancer cells readily use acetate molecules as a carbon source to produce fats and promote growth. This occurs through histone acetylation — activating fat-production-related genes. Interestingly, acetate concentrations don’t even need to be high. This aligns strongly with my earlier hypothesis: cells absorb a...

How exactly do omega-6 oils affect metabolism? Is vinegar/acetate really the culprit?

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Let me start with some reasoning because there’s still a lot of confusion surrounding the metabolism of seed-based vegetable oils, which primarily contain the omega-6 fatty acid linoleic acid (LA). Studies show very mixed results, which is why irreconcilable camps of supporters and opponents of seed oils have formed among different dietary preference groups. You already know my stance, but I always try to remain as unbiased as possible first. This post is meant as a hard blow to researchers because everything might be completely different from what we’ve thought so far. The reason is that our researchers often forget to measure some basic metabolic parameters, which then secretly skew the results in one direction or another far more than the observed variables. But more on that later. A while back, I explained that when linoleic acid is burned in the mitochondria, there’s an increased consumption of NADPH molecules because the enzyme 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase (DECR) is activated. I ne...

How Exactly Is Cellular Aging Activated?

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The circle is now closing. The cellular senescence of stem cells appears to be the root of the problems in our nearly perfect self-repairing organism. If we lose our functional stem cells, the repair mechanisms will be severely limited. To prevent this, we need to understand how it works in detail. Which molecules are degraded, and which processes are disrupted? Adding extracellular vesicles produced by senescent cells (P5 EVsG93A or P5 EVsWT) increases DNA damage (β-Gal+ cells). This is due to the effect of misfolded, oxidized superoxide dismutase (SOD1). Research on Alzheimer's disease may help. I’ve mentioned the issue of cognitive impairment related to this serious disease several times before. The most interesting was a study on a mouse model, tracking metabolic changes linked to enzyme acetylation and the availability of acetyl-CoA molecules in the cytoplasm . Back then, I didn’t realize that cellular pseudohypoxia is a manifestation of cellular senescence — cellular aging. T...

FGF21: Another Fighter Against Cellular Aging?

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If you’re still unaware of what cellular senescence (cellular aging) is, check out older posts . In short, cellular senescence is emerging as a major trigger for chronic, hard-to-treat metabolic and health problems. The only difference lies in where senescent cells accumulate and stop obeying central commands — for example, to multiply or, conversely, to break down. These cells interfere with healthy ones, sending them misleading signals (SASP), but overall, it still appears that everything is functioning almost as before. A typical trigger for cellular senescence is when the antioxidant system fails to break down hydrogen peroxide, leading to the release of signaling molecules from mitochondrial membranes. Depending on the state of the membranes, corresponding defense mechanisms are activated — for instance, oxidative metabolism (OxPhos) is halted and replaced by fermentation, which produces less hydrogen peroxide and doesn’t require oxygen. All this happens in an environment where ox...

Vinegar/sodium acetate rejuvenates blood vessels, another elixir of youth?

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In my previous post , I pointed out a study in which scientists extended the lifespan of mice by up to five months, about 17%, through mechanical stress induced by ultrasound. I also mentioned that it would be beneficial to combine the therapy with the supplementation of sodium acetate or vinegar, as these activate the same pathways, namely SIRT1 and AMPK . Immediately afterward, I came across a study showing the successful suppression of cellular senescence using sodium acetate in vascular endothelial cell cultures — the inner lining of blood vessels. Almost as if on cue, the study was published just a few days ago, on May 12th of this year. This is a fascinating study that combines the investigation of substances produced by gut bacteria that damage our blood vessels and accelerate the aging of the inner vascular lining. Researchers identified the compounds phenylacetic acid (PAA) and phenylacetylglutamine (PAGln), which are primarily produced by bacteria of the genus Clostridium. T...