2022-01-14 - Interview Dr. David Sinclair - Reverse Your Age: What To Eat & When To Eat For LONGEVITY
- Interview with Dr. David Sinclar
- Shawn Stevenson
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_J35BOWd1E&ab_channel=ShawnStevenson
Transcript
is there a diet that makes them live
longer any mixed combinations of
carbohydrate protein and fat and was
hoping to see finally what works and he
found out they all did the same thing
they all had short life spans but there
was a one group what specifically
sparked your mind to be to have this
idea
that we could extend our lifespan
uh well to me it's it's plain
it's obvious it's in plain sight um and
what i'm trying to do with my life is to
shake the world up to realize that
we don't have to accept what we think is
the inevitable
um and so the mantra in my lab and in my
in the book that i wrote is uh nothing
is inevitable
and the problem with aging is that we
accept it because it's so common we see
everything around us get old and we say
well maybe there's
we just have to accept it and it was my
grandmother who taught me that that
didn't have to be the case
uh she raised me because my mother was
working and she was young she had my
father when she was only 15.
and so that going back to the 1930s that
was a big deal right she was kicked out
of high school and but she came to
australia ran away from europe from
hungary
and raised me and her view was adults
screw up everything
because she'd seen what happened during
the war and after afterwards
and but she was a huge rebel she was the
ultimate rebel my my our 16 year old
daughter has the same
genes so it's it's tough raising her but
the attitude when i was young was rules
are meant to be broken so she would
she taught me and you know
the police probably uh will remember a
few of these things she told me you
don't have to wear what people say you
have to wear so she was kicked off bondi
beach for wearing a bikini which in in
those days was illegal
she used to drive like a maniac not
speeding so much but she would drive
like this looking around and dance to
the music so the car is going like this
to uh beethoven's ninth
and that kind of thing so i i've grown
up saying we don't have to accept the
way the world is adopts adults grew up
everything but she also was a humanist
and she wasn't religious but she said
david you have to do the best you can to
leave your mark
and allow humanity to reach its
potential and not let others screw it up
so i've spent every day doing that but
why aging because to me it's obvious
this is the biggest unsolved problem if
aliens came down to see us and judged us
as a species they'd say
pretty good on
atomic theory quantum mechanics but this
aging thing you don't even realize it's
a problem that you can solve we figured
that out 50 000 years ago what are you
doing and that's what i'm trying to do
here with the time that i have yeah and
you said in the book and it was very
jarring to see you know you said that
there is no biological reason for us to
age and in fact you said that aging is
and you you approach it as being a
disease well it is a disease it's just
we can call it whatever we want but what
is a disease a disease is something that
happens over time that causes you to
have a disability which you know well
and it causes frailty and eventually it
can cause death okay
that's aging right
is it not
what so what's the difference why do we
separate disease
from aging the only difference is
because aging happens to more than 50 of
us
and that's a crazy distinction i would
say that that's even more important that
we focus research development
policy on actually what kills most of us
this is really fascinating because
for me
just you bringing up the conversation
the way that you did
i realized that we know pieces of aging
like what it looks like and we're
attempting to address different pieces
but there is no unified theory of aging
as you pointed out but there are these
uh characteristics of aging that we're
all trying to attack
well that that that was true a few years
ago what i've put forth in my book
is a theory that
i think can explain why we age and
explain why all these other things
happen
now we scientists have we love to put
things into categories and we came up
with about seven or eight causes of
aging we call these the hallmarks
don't want to get too carried away call
them hallmarks
um and we've been very satisfied for the
last probably eight years
uh that this is the the road map to
extending lifespan if you can solve or
treat each one of these eight then we'll
live longer now that
i have no
qualms with i think that's true
but that still begs the question
what causes those to happen and so my
theory i've called it the information
theory of aging if you boil it down to
an equation if you want its first
principles
i think aging is a loss of information
and that's what's causing the problem so
what we need to do is a preserve the
information and see if there's a backup
hard drive of youthfulness that we can
tap into and reset
our computers
this is so fascinating
you specifically just this is a great uh
segway into
looking at the digital nature of dna
and i like when i read this in your book
it really just flipped a switch for me
because there's a a digital aspect and
then when we're talking about our genes
in our gene expression there's an analog
aspect so let's talk about this digital
aspect of dna
yeah well
this is the crux of everything and most
scientists don't talk the way i do we've
had to invent our own vocabulary and
metaphors
so dna we all are very familiar with
without dna that we get from our parents
we're screwed right without uh the
ability to encode proteins and run the
cell it's important but that information
is much more robust than we realize we
think of it as this very fragile
chemical it's actually not fragile you
can boil it you can find it in fossils
it's pretty strong
yeah so this is robust and it can
certainly last 80 years our lifespan it
can probably last a thousand years if
we're good to it
so what's the other problem so that you
said that's the digital part of the the
genome or the the information so there's
atcg okay
people will remember from high school
days if they're not biologists it's just
a digital code encoded in chemicals four
of them
instead of being as ones and zeros it's
just four letters
but there's this other type of
information that's just as important for
our survival and that's the epigenome
okay so what's the epigenome it's just
that's a complex
word for the control systems that
control the genome
in the way that
i'll forgive my uh anachronism here but
the dvd
uh is the digital information
and the analog is is the ability to read
that so the digital
the dvd player is analog so it's moving
around and it can move in any possible
direction
what does that mean for the cell well
what's actually literally happening is
that as we develop as embryos we're
spooling out parts of dna in every cell
differently in every cell so if you're a
nerve cell at this part of the brain
that's developing you'll have this big
loop of dna and those genes will stay on
for most of your life if not all but
there are parts that you don't want on
you don't want a liver gene on in the
brain so it spools out uh very tightly
like you would a
hose reel
and that keeps these genes off
hopefully for a hundred years or more
but what i'm proposing is that insults
to the body and if our body becomes
complacent
and we there you know there are good
things we can do to our bodies
what we lose is that structure these
loops and these these tight bundles and
those fall apart we can see that in our
studies
and we can actually measure that and
it's a clock
it's a clock of aging if we measure
those loops and the changes to this
epigenome
i can actually tell you how old you are
biologically and i can predict with high
accuracy when you're going gonna die
almost to the month wow
that's nice
scary right i haven't had it done would
you get your clock down
i mean um
and this is just a little sidebar here
but
this brings to mind the science behind
telomeres and measuring that as this
biological marker but there's more
there's much more to it that's just one
aspect yeah and what's
um comforting about this theory and and
it's the mark of any decent theory is
that it should be able to explain not
just one aspect but all aspects of a
very complex system and aging is the
ultimate
complex system and we've also got
a thousand years of observation that we
have to explain and if it doesn't
explain half of it throw the theory out
but as i've described in in my book the
theory does actually
explain everything
even telomere loss telomeres are the
ends of chromosomes that that wear down
over time
the epigenome the proteins that package
those loops and those those bundles are
also packaging the ends of the
chromosomes
and the unraveling leads to acceleration
of that loss as well
and uh and actually the factors that
stabilize our epigenome
and we work on some of these they're
called sertons we've worked on them for
20 years we can activate them by being
healthy
they are involved in protecting the ends
of chromosomes as well and bundling them
tightly so they don't erode and cause
aging to happen as well yeah i i want to
talk about these sir tunes this is
really really fascinating so
you are is this under that umbrella of
what you're calling longevity genes yes
okay and how many are there
well in total the th there's dozens but
they fall into three main categories
that we know of the sertuan's there are
seven of them you know we all have some
of them well you better have all of them
or you're dead
they're really important but we have
better copies than others some people
have variants that predispose them to
long life there's one called 3t6 and
if you have your genome we can have a
look to see if you've got the right
variant to live long time
but by the way only 20 of
longevity is genetic so the good news is
that a lot of it's in our hands because
it's epigenetic that's what's great
about this theory is that if i'm right
genes are only a tiny part of the story
but these genes are still important
because they protect the epigenome and
make sure that dvd is read correctly and
doesn't get scratches so you can read
the symphony for longer
this is so fascinating and i love that
so much um
and just to know and to have the
affirmation with science that only 10 to
20 percent
of our longevity has to do with our
genetics
and this goes back because as i was
reading before i got to this part i was
thinking about the human genome project
just automatically my mind always goes
there when i hear about genes and all
the work that went into it i think it
was like at least a billion dollars to
try to map the human genome when we get
back like it's like 20 000 genes and
we're thinking we'll have hundreds of
thousands or whatever the number might
be
but the the big missing piece
was this junk dna right this there was
all this other data that was just
ignored because it didn't fit into the
category of being a gene
well that's right and we still we still
don't have a complete human genome
because the these missing pieces are
very repetitive and they're also little
genes that were missed by the computer
algorithms in the 2000s which we in my
lab and others we've gone back and we've
compared humans to chimps and macaque
monkeys and these little genes there are
thousands of those we think and with
proteins swimming in our bloodstream
that control health and longevity we
have a lot to learn about the genome but
what people have mostly missed is the
epigenome because that's a lot harder to
read
you can read a code that's a
one-dimensional
program
but to read something in three and even
four dimensions if you include our
lifespan over time
that
required another 20 years of innovation
but we now have the tools
where we can
this is really amazing for for something
that costs i think it's a few thousand
dollars but it's the size of a candy bar
um
it's about that big
in my lab we can do your whole genome
instead of for a billion dollars i could
do it for maybe a couple hundred bucks
now take me a couple of days but we can
also now read the epigenome and tell us
where those loops are where those
bundles are
and also measure the chemicals that
accumulate on our genome that tell us
where the loop should be
and how old we are literally how old we
are biologically
so throw out the candles who cares about
candles it's those chemical marks that
seem to determine our actual age and how
healthy we are this is so cool so i'm
thinking in terms like we need to stop
celebrating our chronological birthday
and celebrate these biological birthdays
because they're different well they are
but the good news is you can't really
turn back your chronological age you
can't release well you can lie about
your age but it's not going to help
but you can what we've discovered is we
can now dial up aging speed it up
in animals and now that we know how
aging we think we know how aging works
we can also reverse it yeah
so that that's the what i wanted to tell
the world about because that's that
changes how you think about your life
absolutely i mean i couldn't help but
think about myself
um in my experience when i was 20 years
old i was diagnosed with
a condition that's usually attributed to
people who are much older i had
degenerative spinal disease degenerative
disc disease and my physician said i had
the spine of an eight-year-old man not a
healthy 80 year old either
and to get that bill of goods when
you're just 20 of course it could do a
big number on your psyche but he also
said this was incurable right i've
created this situation and there's
nothing i can do about it
and
we can get into the nocebo effect and
all that stuff but the bottom line is it
took about two years before i decided
let me try to do something about this
and i got a scan done it's probably been
about
a year ago now and my spine looks
younger than the age i'm at now right
how is that even possible you know and
this is what you're talking about in the
book well that's the power of the
epigenome you're not changing your
genome you get that from your parents
but you can change your lifestyle you
can change it tomorrow and you did
you're in a back brace as well you can
through that grace yep yeah it's
impressive but it doesn't surprise you
yeah really
and that's what i want everybody to know
and you're doing a great job telling the
world is that you can change your life
you can change your health just by how
you live your life even with without
medicines
and it's it's pretty easy to do right
but it's super powerful and the message
that i'm bringing is
thanks to work in my lab and dozens
around the world we've also figured out
we think why
these things that you're doing and
people who are healthy
why they work
because they're turning on these
defensive genes these longevity genes
that are in our bodies but they don't
get activated unless we do the right
things eat the right things eat the
right time of day we get enough sleep
um we exercise and the right way then
these genes come on and they protect us
and they don't just slow aging we see
that they reverse many aspects of aging
as well yeah and i want to talk about
some of these things specifically but
before we do i really want to give
people i think it's a brilliant analogy
of our genes
functioning sort of like keys on a piano
so can you share that analogy yeah sure
so the the genes are like a
piano with 20 000 keys
and imagine there's a pianist that's
perfectly
young and
skillful when we're young
and this is our cells are able to read
the right genes at the right time and
place so that's why when we get a cut we
get a cold we recover very quickly but
what's happening is the pianist in each
of our cells
starts to
lose her eyesight starts to become a
little bit demented and initially plays
a few of the wrong keys but if you're
listening not too intentively it still
sounds great but over time what's
happening is then she's losing her
eyesight she can't see the music and
she's banging the wrong keys eventually
it sounds like
crap and it's a cacophony and everyone's
walking out of the symphony
or or the performance that's what aging
is our cells are losing our ability to
read the right genes at the right time
because these loops and these structures
that we think we can now reset so we can
actually we think go in give the pianist
or even get a new pianist or give that
pianist glasses and new music
and within just a matter of weeks now
you get the symphony back again and
cells work like they did when they were
young again um wow
so cool
um
and can we talk a little bit about so
how how does the epi epigenetics play
into that whole equation
oh so the epigenetics are it's brand new
so this is science that you will will
not really read about anywhere else
the epigenetics are
laid down during development so is where
embryos i mean one of the miracles of
what what exists on this planet is you
can take a fertilized single cell and
make a baby that comes out with 26
billion cells that all know
what they are and how to work and work
together
but over time those instructions in each
of those cells
not the genes but the ability to read
the right genes is lost and that gets
accelerated in part by not activating
our longevity genes well when we're
young we have a lot of activity we don't
need to exercise as much right but as we
get older they become complacent if
we're obese if we sit around all day
you've written a book i've written a
book we know what happens to our bodies
they lose activity it's brutal
and eventually the pianist
is has lost her ability to play it
but what's great about what we've
discovered is that you can
make sure that those keys the pianist
stays young she doesn't need glasses for
much longer
uh and then what i didn't know until
about a year ago
and it is described in the book because
i was writing it as we were making these
discoveries
is that there's a backup pianist in our
cells every one of them that tells those
loops and those bundles
what they were like when we were babies
and we can access those just by turning
on a set of three genes out of those 20
000 that sets in motion a program to
reset the entire cell
wow this is so cool so cool
so would the the pianist be
function function sort of like the the
epigenetics yeah the pianist is the
epigenome and the piano is the gene so
it's determining which keys are getting
played which genes are getting expressed
and which ones aren't that's right and
every cell has to do that because the
nerve cell in your brain has been there
since we were young
and it's got to stay a nerve cell
if it starts behaving like a skin cell
we're in trouble but that's what i think
aging is if we take an old mouse two
years old and we look at its skin its
skin is going to look look more like a
nerve cell
and we have to remind it
go back to being a skin cell you you
fool but we can now do that we have
these reprogramming factors
reprogramming genes
that tells the epigenome
how to restructure itself and read the
genes as though
it was young and
cells remember what they should be doing
but but old people we see or at least in
old mice we see that there are a
cacophony a mess a melange of different
cell types instead of being
rigorously urinary cell get back to
being a nerve cell and one of the
amazing things that we did by resetting
the eye so we use the eyes as one of our
test
tissues we can take an old mouse that's
a year old and it's doesn't see very
well
we can actually measure mouse eyesight
number of ways we can either measure the
electrical impulses or we can
see if they can see moving objects
and in both those cases we can
by delivering these reprogramming
epigenetic reprogramming genes
we can tell the nerves at the back of
that old eye
to function again to play the right keys
so turn on the right genes to be young
they do it
and just a few weeks later those mice
can see as well as they did when they
were babies fascinating that's so
fascinating and that's a complex organ
we're not talking about
just skin an eye is probably the most
complex part of the body if well the
brain's probably more complex but this
is a big deal um you go through certain
phases in the book and you start off
with some of the things that a lot of
folks are tuned to but you dive a little
bit deeper and make it make a little bit
more sense
and one of those things
is obviously our nutrition and there are
certain nutrients that play a part and
then there's certain ways of eating that
play a part so let's talk a little bit
about each of those
right so part two of the book is about
what we know and what we can do in our
daily lives and then we later on we have
a glimpse into the future but what we
can do right now is pretty simple so you
mentioned nutrients uh first of all we
have a theory that uh
bears out
which is eat foods that are stressed
stressed out
which is a weird concept right but we do
it naturally we drink some of us drink
red wine which is a stressed grape
before we pick it
we often eat colored foods so spinach is
a dark green food there's blueberries
which are dark
the wider ones are not as good so why is
that well stressed food
produces a lot of what we call
xenohermetic molecules
and i'll explain what that means it's a
terrible word we coin but xeno xeno
means from other species
and hormesis is a very important word
you've got to remember the word hormesis
because it every day you should think
about it hormesis is what doesn't kill
us makes us live longer
and
it's a
term that means you've got to get your
body out of its complacency you've got
to trigger those defenses those
longevity genes so xenohemisis is
you don't have to
only run and eat well
at the right times but you can also get
these molecules from the right
animals and plants but particularly
plants that are stressed because when
plants are stressed they're making these
molecules of health for their own
benefit right they're trying to survive
they're turning on their longevity genes
we forget plants have longevity genes
too
so a stress plant will make these
colored molecules to protect from uv and
dehydration
when we eat them
they trigger our own body's defenses and
you can get the benefit so that's
nutrition colored foods stress foods
organic is stressed right you don't want
the perfect lettuce that's been
not put any stress
and we need to do more of that we need
to let our plants stress a little bit
before we eat them
and then nutrition there's a lot of
nutrition now there's a debate every
week about what's good what i do is in
on
the part three of the book i list it out
um so i i truly believe that we've got
to mix it up right the secret is not so
much what we eat but when we eat
and also what we eat should have variety
so i don't say
only eat
meat i don't say only eat carbohydrate
i eat a little bit of everything i try
to avoid big amounts of meat because
there's one of these longevity pathways
remember i said there are three main
ones one of them senses how much meat we
eat and amino acids so you need to give
it time to rest and settle down so
that's important so often i'm not eating
a big steak but i will eat meat if i've
worked out because our body needs amino
acids
but that's it make sure that you it
actually what's more important than what
you eat is when you eat
how's that for an interesting thing to
say and what we've discovered with my
collaborators
and i need to give a shout out to one of
my friends at the nih national
institutes of health rafael de cabo he
studied 10 000 mice
and what he tried to figure out was
is there a diet that makes them live
longer any mixed combinations of
carbohydrate protein and fat and was
hoping to see finally what works and he
found out they all did the same thing
they all had short life spans but there
was a one group where he only gave them
the food two hours a day instead of all
throughout the day
and they lived about twenty to thirty
percent longer wow love it wow so i if
there's one thing i could say
that i've learned after reading ten
thousand papers and studying this my
whole life it's
eight less often
that's so good that's so good
wow um
there's so much good news packed into
that
and the first thing is like you get to
eat and you can see clearly with a study
like that that we're
debating the minutia of your
macronutrient ratios right and for
everybody can be dramatically different
but what we do see across the board is
that if you take whatever deliciousness
you're trying to have and compact it
into a shorter window of time and giving
your body a little bit of uh of a break
you can turn on some of these longevity
genes that's it so that that's the key
the the take-home message here is you
want to trick your body into thinking
times are tough
adversity hormesis
so you can tell your body through eating
stressed foods that times are going to
be tough because your food supply is
dying
you can trick your body into thinking
that you need to be running away from
saber-toothed cats because you get on a
treadmill or you run or you you lose
your breath
um or you get hungry during the day and
that also tricks your body into thinking
whoa i need to fight back against
adversity i need to fight against
diseases and the long-term effect of
that the benefit
is longevity
yeah
so just to take a a small step back
because i know that
there's and it's so cool that you talked
about this a little bit in the book but
eating
is
it's important as well because
for you know some of us can think and
this is the american way is like a
little of something
is good
massive amounts of it must be better
right so instead of just doing an
intermittent fast
each day i'll just fast for you know
two weeks or whatever you know what i'm
saying
and so but then there's this role of
something called mtor
that comes into play you know so and
nutrition is involved in that so can you
talk a little bit about this mtor yeah
so mtar mtar is the second uh leg on the
the three-legged stool
uh i mentioned sirtuins yeah
mtor is is probably the the most
important to get right but they'll talk
to each other but this is a really key
one
uh mtor is sensing how many amino acids
are in your body particular amino acids
leucine isoleucine
branch chain amino acids and if you're
always eating meat every day your mtor
will be
active
mtor is there to to grow new body parts
it's there to grow larger taller when
you're developing
the problem is if you're always feeding
at amino acids and trying to bulk up
yeah you'll get great big muscles and
you'll look great but the long-term
effect of that we've seen in animals at
least is that you're not harnessing your
body's defenses your longevity genes the
mtor
isn't in this case you want to turn it
off you want to down play it because a
low m tour activity predicts longevity
and uh so that's why i'm mostly focusing
on plant-based foods as much as i can
but when i need to bulk up and if i work
out typically every sunday then i will
eat meat but give like you say give your
body a rest mix it up
so mtor is that's
it's not talked about enough and
especially in the kind of conventional
health circles and fitness circles
but this is one of the reasons we need
protein and
but the great news is that
a small amount can go a long way is what
i'm hearing
well it is it is and you don't need to
restrict everything it's important to
give yourself the ability to repair
itself but if you're always
in this
rebuild mode always body building mode
which you know you'll end up looking
great but
it actually comes down to vanity versus
longevity if you're only you only care
about vanity you're going to miss out on
the longevity part so
this is the trick is to
do the exercise do the weight lifting
you need that um i need to do a lot more
but i do it on weekends
but
then give your body a break you don't
want to work out hard every day we know
that yeah you don't want to eat three
meals a day we believe that's bad
um and so we have to overturn what we
thought which was more is always better
so if we can let's talk about because we
talked about amino acids thrown in there
but some of the specific nutrients and
one of them
uh
is resveratrol and you know we've been
hearing this connected with longevity
for a while and but for you to say it it
gave me a lot more mental credence as to
its value and because of that
we have the best people in the world
here on my team
somebody who read the book
and they brought in some chocolate for
you that we have sitting here uh some
high quality dark chocolate because of
reading that that is one of the sources
for me immediately i think back to to
red wine and people was like oh
resveratrol i'm
a bottle a day right and it's that's not
necessarily what we're going for there's
many other sources
well there is and uh you can have it in
its pure form too i i do that because
the amount that i'm taking and i've done
so for the last 13 years is the
equivalent of 500 bottles of red wine
which i do not recommend for breakfast
yeah
you might uh do your liver in uh but
resveratrol is super interesting because
we discovered that it controlled these
sort of
longevity genes and that was now 13
years ago
and what we've been studying ever since
is
how do they work and when should we eat
it
and what does it do and the good news is
that 13 years ago all we were doing was
extending the lifespan of baker's yeast
and worms and flies but now there have
been clinical trials and there are
products out there that have been tested
on many people
and there are clear benefits actually in
these placebo-controlled trials which
are essential otherwise you don't know
for sure and you see a lowering of blood
sugar you see improvements in in liver
function and these studies
finally show that what we saw in mice
initially in 2006 which by the way those
that study we put out sent red wine
sales up 30 and they stayed up so anyone
who has been taking red wine for
drinking red wine for the last uh you
know a few years you're welcome
but uh but seriously the the what we saw
in the mice was that they were protected
against high fat food
they were just as healthy
against an american bad diet
but and they lived as long as a healthy
lean one
but that's not an excuse to just sit
around on the couch and pop resveratrol
by no means what's often missed even by
scientists is the data that's in the
back of those papers
two important points one is
if you take resveratrol every other day
you get the greatest benefit and we've
had mice living over three years which
is a long time for a mouse they
typically die a bit over two
and the second thing um that we learned
was that
that if you eat it with fatty foods it's
actually better or you eat it with a bit
of oil it gets into the body a lot
better and so that's why i mix my
resveratrol with some yogurt just a
couple of spoons in the morning i don't
want to eat a big breakfast but without
that you're a lot of it's not even
making it into your system and there
have been clinical trials that have
failed and when i look at how they did
it yeah they were giving their patients
or their subjects a capsule with water
and that's not gonna work
wow that's fascinating that's really
fascinating i never thought about that
so it has a fat soluble aspect to it
oh for sure it's like brick brick dust
chemists would tell you brick dust
and if unless it's dissolved yeah it
just
pretty much won't get absorbed by the
gut
and so we know red wine's a source what
else do we have
missiles also supplements for sure
i take the supplement because you'd have
to eat a lot of chocolate as well
um
but you know
let me let me just make it clear that i
don't know
if it's going to make me live any longer
but i can tell you my cardiovascular
system looks like it's a 20 year old so
that's good so so far so good
but what else can we do we could peanuts
have a little bit
but unlike a lot of things we can do in
our diet
resveratrol isn't found in huge
quantities there's only a milligram or
two in red wine even yeah and i'm taking
between 500 and a thousand milligrams
i love the fact that you mentioned the
cycling aspect and this is true with so
much because again we have that some is
good more is better let me just do this
every day
and i love the the the concept and also
just the
the the
practicality of cycling nutrients
because even if you just think about the
way that we evolved you know we're not
having the same thing every day
yeah and here's the great news we used
to think that calorie restriction was
the way to go and
we've known for thousands of years that
being hungry is good for you but we used
to think that based on monkey studies
and rat studies that those animals and
we would always have to be hungry
but you've got to pulse it you're
allowed to eat and be full once in a
while
and uh and that's great news because if
you
give
mice and rodents now rats food
during the day they can eat 90 of what
they would normally eat in a calorie
restricted diet but be hungry all the
time
so we can live great lives i eat
a late lunch or skip lunch but then i
typically eat a really nice dinner and
i've actually grown to love food a lot
more for that reason wow
you do appreciate food rather than just
shoving it down during the day
uh but i think i live first of all a
much healthier life but also
one where i'm a lot more grateful for
food yeah and i i could um
i could personally affirm that
experience and i remember i mean this is
over a decade ago but i would go this is
one of the things that makes me good at
what i do is that experimentation you
know so i would do uh several weeks of
fasting where i'm just having juice
right it's vegetable juice
and i remember the and i
i've shared the story before but it
might be hard to believe but i didn't
eat a salad like an actual salad until i
was about 25 years old that was the
first time i ever had one in my life i
was raised on like
fish sticks and like i was probably like
four percent ravioli like just in my
blood right and so eating a salad just
was out of my paradigm it's just like
why would i do that and i remember after
a 21 day fast i went and got a salad
and prior to this just a couple weeks
before i did the fast i tried to eat the
salad went right to the trash can
gagging okay
i got the salad and i took the first
bite and my brain is just like lighting
just like this is so good i can't but i
was still scared i'm like i'm gonna
throw up any moment and i took the next
bite and i'm just like
this is the greatest thing i've ever
eaten in my life
and i ate the the whole little salad i'd
gotten for myself it was that whole
foods just like tucked in a corner and
this is true so i was walking out i
threw the box away and i told a random
person i was like i just ate a salad and
they looked at me like i was from
another planet they're like oh okay you
know
and i was just blown away at how much i
appreciated eating after not eating for
so long right and so having those
moments even now you know just
intermittent fasting through the day i
totally agree last night we had dinner i
was
really crushing it yesterday just
working doing some stuff behind the
scenes we had dinner it was the it was
like the best meal i've ever had in my
life you know and i've had that same
food before but it's just i appreciate
it so much more well i'll confess
something for the first time uh on on
your show
uh now that i appreciate food and and i
i know that food is
not just pleasurable it's actually good
for you
i'll go back to my old habits and
there's food around us that's the
problem it's everywhere so you you your
reptilian brain will pick up something
shove it in your mouth and then i'll
think
that's in my mouth why did i do that
and i'll go through the calculation does
this meet the criteria of whether it's
worthy of eating do i swallow and
occasionally i'll say no it's not worth
swallowing this crap what i don't even
enjoy this and if i'm not enjoying it
it's not worth it so you know i know
there's eating disorders this is not one
of those but
i really i only put in my mouth now what
i really want to eat yeah but i love it
fascinating um you know
just opening up this conversation and
looking at the different dimensions of
how
it's not just the food that we're eating
but how we're doing it right when we're
eating has a huge role to play
um it's just it broadens the
conversation because i think we really
can easily get caught up in the the
minutiae like we talked about earlier
you know like trying to get your
macronutrient ratios correct that stuff
matters but there's a bigger
conversation and
getting more into this bigger
conversation
in the book
um you also stretch out and you you get
into
conversation and things that we've got
science behind that were really
counterintuitive for me or things that
for example metformin right i want to
talk about this i spent
over a decade working in my clinical
practice as a nutritionist alongside
physicians to help get people off
metformin and then seeing this data that
you're
sharing in the book that metformin might
actually
be one of those well it is according to
your data
those things that can help to switch on
those longevity genes so let's talk a
little bit about that so just for if you
can for everybody share what is
metformin and why is this something that
folks are now who don't have diabetes
are taking
yeah so metformin is one of those gifts
to humanity it's on the list
so the world world health organization
has called it an essential medicine for
humanity because it it's so safe
it's not perfectly safe but it's so safe
and the benefits are are really clear
especially for diabetics
so there are these three legs to the
stool the three pillars sirtuins we
talked about we talked about mtor and
amino acids the third one
is called ampk or amp kinase and this
protein senses how much energy we have
in the body
and if we have low amounts of energy
then it'll try to make more and that's
actually healthy so you want to also
trick your body into thinking it has low
energy you don't want low energy but you
can trick your body so how do you do
that one is to be hungry
one is to exercise and the other is to
take a medicine
that inhibits mitochondria and lowers
the amount of energy that the cells
producing so the body goes holy crap
we're running out of energy and it'll
make try to make more
and that's good for you now the side
effect of that
is having better blood sugar levels so
your body becomes
what's called insulin sensitive you know
this that when you're type 2 diabetic
your body doesn't register the insulin
that's your pancreas is putting out and
it just makes more and more insulin and
eventually your pancreas can give out
but the problem with that is you have
high amounts of sugar glucose in your
bloodstream which will cross-link
proteins and accelerate aging
and all sorts of problems cardiovascular
disease wounds won't heal and this is
truly accelerating aging we've proven
that in our field
metformin
is shown to be very effective against
type 2 diabetes and if you have type 2
diabetes your doctor will typically put
you on that medicine now it comes from
the french lilac it's derived from a
plant so it's a xenohermetic molecule
actually
and but it's classified as a drug so it
falls into that category so in this
country at least but not all
you need to get a prescription for it
which actually puts it out of reach for
many people but it also makes a lot of
people wary that if it comes from a
doctor it might be a little bit fishy it
might be toxic but it really has been
shown in a study of over a hundred
thousand people now many studies
actually
that diabetics who take metformin in the
long run
aren't just better off for diabetes but
are actually
healthier and protected against cancer
heart disease alzheimer's and frailty
even more so than people who don't take
metformin and who don't have type 2
diabetes
that's it that's stunning yeah and when
i heard that i didn't believe it my
friend near brazil eye doctor neil
brazile's the world's expert he told me
that and i had to go and check on these
papers which i referenced in the book
it's true so i become a real convert and
about two or so years ago i started
taking metformin i don't have diabetes
yet but i was on my way up i actually
met my trajectory of the last
11 years and i could see i was headed
for diabetes it's in my family
so i stopped it in its tracks and
actually reversed
type 2 diabetes i wasn't
now i'm i'm at no risk of having
diabetes because i'm on metformin
because i've made these changes in my
life
now is it for everybody i think if
you're young and your blood glucose
levels are low
not not needed if you're exercising and
eating eating right
but if you're i'm 50 now and if your
blood glucose goes up every year
and you can't control that metformin i
think is a good thing to talk about with
your doctor yeah you know what and just
since you just mentioned that being 50
if folks aren't watching the video on
youtube you look like
maybe maybe 30s you know like 35 you
know um
you have this uh and your your energy is
high you're creating all these different
projects working on different papers
um so you have that aspect your physical
appearance like you're living you're
living proof of the stuff you talk about
and i can see you're just getting warmed
up as well you know and so just a little
shout out for those who are listening to
audio
the guys got it dialed in you know and
so but i wanted to bring this up because
i also with the model health show i want
to stretch our thinking
we do like i mentioned you know i was
looking at what can i do for these
patients to help them to normalize their
blood sugar naturally right and removing
the cause oftentimes was you know
mountain dew or whatever it was you know
just
but if we eliminate those things
and your body is already in a healthy
state
adding in these different medications
potentially again this is just a
conversation i want to get going there
might be some potential benefits
and this is still early but it really
got me thinking when i was reading the
book
and
one of the other aspects
i think this might go back to because
for me i think
that this competes metformin can compete
with some of the hermetic
benefits of other things potentially
right so can you talk a little bit about
that maybe like let's talk about
exercise in that context because it's a
hermitic stressor yeah so how does that
compete
yes so remember we're working with a
very complex machine our bodies and
there are these three legs of the stool
but we don't know exactly which ones to
tweak and when we're still figuring this
out as scientists
the good news is that we live in a world
now where scientists can talk directly
to the public and we put out newsletters
so you don't have to wait 10 years to
hear it from your doctor or 20 years
but we the honest truth is we don't know
exactly what the best combination is and
we're learning actually that sometimes
you don't want to combine them at the
same time you might want to do them on
off days and metformin and exercise
is a case in point
now what we've just discovered in a
couple of papers that came out this year
only
is that metformin because it it tricks
the body into having low energy by
inhibiting the mitochondrial energy
levels
if you give elderly patients metformin
and give them weight lift do
ask them to do weight lifting
they will bulk up both of them all right
both sets with me from without but the
ones that didn't get more metformin will
have bigger muscles
okay but not a lot not a lot bigger they
all got bigger muscles
so it is inhibiting the growth the
hypertrophy of muscle but here's what's
not talked about on social media or
appreciated by a lot of people
those people those elderly people were
all the same strength even though they
didn't have the same sized muscles
so it still gave them the benefits they
just didn't look as bulky so that's
where i go back to vanity versus
longevity right but i think there is a
way to optimize it we don't know for
sure and dr peter tia our friend uh he
argues this with me and he also agrees
at least on this point
that
we don't want to be taking metformin on
days where our muscles are growing
that's probably the best and that's what
i try to do i skip metformin when i go
to the gym
but we disagree on exactly
what the precise
combination is
uh but he also thinks that uh fasting
for a long time is good
and i i don't know if that's true i find
it extremely difficult to go for more
than one day
i start to lose
my blood sugar goes too low and i've
measured it with one of those uh
monitors that you can stick them on
right fascinating by the way have you
done that yeah the 24 hour i mean just
stays with you i haven't yeah yeah but
many of my friends have you learn a lot
um and actually i didn't have breakfast
i can feel it right now my blood sugar
levels are going low i should eat some
chocolate actually
um but yeah if i go for three days or a
week like peter does
he actually is turning on pathways that
i think are even more beneficial yeah
there's one called chaperone-mediated
autophagy which is basically super
recycling of the body's proteins and
that's something i think that
he's right about
and uh if you can go for three days
you know more power to you right yeah
and i love that so much because there
when when i made the reference earlier
about some is good
uh
more massive amounts is is great there's
still there's usually something there in
the middle or closer towards you know
that little bit those little micro doses
and having an extended fast you know of
a few days
uh obviously you're going to activate
more of these different beneficial
process processes uh autophagy and the
list can go on and on but we also have
to be mindful of
the longevity aspect of happiness
you know um
i think that we don't talk enough about
this first of all and this is just
something consistent that i see you know
i'll read i don't know why i do this all
the time but whenever i can
something comes across my attention on
my phone or a friend or somebody that
that lives to be 100 years old or older
i interview them i read their stories i
read their articles and there's this
consistent thread of happiness there's
this consistent thread of like
meaning in their lives you know so
if you're gonna be pissed for three days
and just like
a krabby patty right just mad at
everybody really that that's it doesn't
equal out for me the benefit potential
benefit that you could be getting yeah
that's right so when we calorie restrict
these mice in my lab they also get
really crabby they fight with each other
especially the the boys so it's natural
but you need to overcome it yeah
but uh i totally agree that that if
you're not happy it's not worth it but
the the key to happiness is mission
and i just came from a conference where
we're talking about how to optimize
those three legs on the stool
and uh one of the speakers was dr cooper
he's the guy that coined the term
aerobics and you might wow
he must be 100 years old he's almost i
mean he's in his late 80s but he's had a
mission in life to make people live
longer and he's treated presidents the
first bush
um george bush
and he his mind is super quick he's
talking like this bam bam bam you think
you're not 80 you're more like a 20 year
old in the way you talk and think and
move now these are test cases these
aren't clinical trials but when you see
him
he's been doing aerobics for the last 40
50 years
i mean a guy like that you want to mimic
that and what he's shown in thousands of
patients that he's treated and tens of
thousands of kilometers or miles that
his patients have run
he can reduce the the rate of aging
clearly and through the trajectory of
his patients
instead of the average lifespan being 80
which is what it is at best for this
country he gets them out to near 90.
so it's clearly the case that if you do
what he's recommending you eat the right
way
starting at an earlier age you don't
have to live to 80 you can play tennis
and at 90 maybe live to 100. yeah but
wait till there's new technology is
coming yeah so exciting and that's why
people have to stay connected to you to
learn more about this
and
speaking of mission
i want to ask you personally um what is
the model that you're setting for other
people with how you live your life
personally right
the way that you are conducting yourself
your business your research what is your
bigger mission
that you're wanting to express or to
achieve
with your life right now
well i think it's the same as a lot of
successful people
i'd be surprised if you don't feel the
same way
we know we're going to die right
there'll be a day where
we know this is it we're done for uh
unless you get hit hit on prematurely
buy a bus or something
when that moment happens i want to be
able to say to myself
i did the most i could to leave the
world a better place than i found it and
it can be a little bit it can be a big
bit but you got to put everything into
it
and i think that humanity can do a lot
better there's far too much complacency
and giving up
and a lot of us just give up they say
the world can't be changed
but you know friends of ours
we all agree that if you have a mission
just pick something that you're good at
and you like and never give up that's
the secret it make you know life's tough
it's long if you're not driven every day
to get up and do something that you love
and you think that it's worthwhile
it's a tough life
yeah i love it
can you let everybody know where they
can pick up your book
and also connect with you online
well we have a website lifespanbook.com
so at lifespanbook.com we have a
newsletter for updates
uh things about lifestyle things about
the new science that we've read
um updates on my dad who's still going
strong at 80 uh climbing mountains and
all lifespanbook.com on social media i'm
on you can find me on twitter and
facebook and on instagram pretty easily
um but we sell books on barnes noble and
amazon um audiobook actually we recorded
the audio book book in this building
right here
and uh it's doing great it's a
bestseller new york times bestseller on
the audiobook and the hardback
um but the audiobook's special to me
because we did something different we
did in between the chapters we had chats
about what we were how we wrote the book
and how we thought about designing the
book so that's an extra free bonus for
people who get the audio book perfect
perfect thank you so much for sharing
your time with us today and thank you
for putting together such an epic trates
on longevity and i think that this is um
it's something that we just really
haven't seen before
uh you weren't afraid to get into the
science you did make it understandable
but this is a little bit more
science-heavy than what publishers would
typically allow
but the stories even like you
articulated with the the pianist example
like it really brings it to life and i
just really admire that so thank you man
well thanks you won't read it anywhere
else because it's it's science right on
the cutting edge but it also it'll
change the way people think about their
lives and what's possible
awesome and you're an inspiration sean i
appreciate it thank you thank you i
received that man thank you thank you
for coming to hang out with us any time
hey if you like this video make sure to
check out this video right here
to up level your health today other
things that were causing cancer that we
didn't know and didn't quite link to
that whole paradigm but we thought well
it must be just the genetic thing so
that's that's why that genetic paradigm
really took off and everybody was sort
of all in on it for so