Follistatin is a protein that our body makes naturally. Your body uses it to control metabolism, grow muscle, and boost fertility. Increasing follistatin can help you put on muscle quickly and may help you burn a significant amount of body fat.
What is Myostatin, and what does it do?
Myostatin is a protein found almost exclusively in muscles used for movement (skeletal muscles), where it is active both before and after birth. This protein typically limits muscle growth, ensuring muscles do not grow too large. The MSTN gene provides instructions for making
What are telomeres
Aging is part of life but is getting older a requirement? Understanding why we age or what causes aging is a puzzle scientists are still attempting to solve. Hypotheses abound: is oxidative stress damaging our DNA? Is glucose to blame?
What is Gene Therapy and How Does It Work
Genes can play an essential role in health — a defective gene or genes can make you sick or be fatal. Acknowledging this, scientists have been working for decades on adjusting or replacing faulty genes with healthy ones to treat,
Can we the stop, slow down or reverse aging?
In a small trial, drugs seemed to rejuvenate the body’s ‘epigenetic clock,’ which tracks a person’s biological age. A small clinical study in California has proposed for the first time that it might be possible to reverse the body’s epigenetic
Cynthia Kenyon-UCSF A Genetic Control Circuit for Aging
In the early 1990s, most scientists did not think that aging was subject to active regulation by genes. However, exciting results from Dr. Kenyon’s lab showed that a single mutation in the daf-2 gene caused the tiny roundworm C. elegans
Chronological age vs. biological age
Chronological age is the number of years a person has been alive. In contrast, biological age refers to how old a person seems, based on several factors, like how your chromosomes have altered over time. In a study, the researchers
The Biology of Slowing & Reversing Aging | Huberman Lab Podcast 52
In this episode, Dr. Andrew Huberman is joined by Dr. David Sinclair, a tenured Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and an expert researcher in longevity. Dr. Sinclair is also the author of Lifespan: Why We Age & Why
Food for Thought The Role of Nutrition in Healthy Aging
The way we eat throughout our lives influences the way we age. Science has demonstrated a well-balanced and varied diet full of nutritious foods like fruits and veggies, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and lean proteins; and limited in sugar, salt,