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- <head><title>The problem of Alzheimer's disease as a clue to immortality - Part 2</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- The problem of Alzheimer's disease as a clue to immortality - Part 2
- </h1>
-
- <p>
- <strong>V. HORMONE IMBALANCE, LEADING TO FAILURE OF PROTECTIVE INHIBITION AND ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- <em>"All cell death is characterized by an increase of intracellular calcium...." "Increase of cytoplasmic
- free calcium may therefore be called 'the final common path' of cell disease and cell death. Aging as a
- background of diseases is also characterized by an increase of intracellular calcium. Diseases typically
- associated with aging include hypertension, arteriosclerosis, diabetes mellitus and dementia."</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <em>T. Fujita, "Calcium, parathyroids and aging," in Calcium-Regulating Hormones. 1. Role in Disease and
- Aging, H. Morii, editor, Contrib. Nephrol. Basel, Karger, 1991, vol. 90, pp. 206-211.
- </em>
- </p>
- <p><strong>THE FUNCTION OF ENERGY</strong></p>
- <p>
- Most people are slightly demented now and then, when they are very sleepy or tired, or sick, or drunk, or
- having a hormone imbalance or extreme anxiety state. Sometimes physicians have described people as demented,
- implying that the condition would never improve, when the person was depressed or hypothyroid. If the person
- has a history of epilepsy, or is very old, the physician is more likely to diagnose dementia than if the
- same loss of mental function occurs in a younger person without a history of a nervous disorder. Even people
- with less education are at increased risk of being diagnosed as "demented."
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1976, I saw a 52 year-old woman who had the diagnosis of epileptic dementia. After 3 or 4 days of taking
- progesterone, her mental function returned to the extent that she could find her way around town by herself,
- and could work. A few months later, she returned to graduate school, got straight As and a master's degree.
- A few years later, a man in his 80s showed the classical signs of senile dementia, with childishness,
- confusion, self-centeredness, and unstable emotions. A few days after getting a mixture of thyroid,
- pregnenolone, and progesterone, his mind was again clear, and he was able to work on a research project he
- had set aside years before.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the body temperature is very much below normal, mental functioning is seriously limited. I think the
- first question that should be asked about a demented person is "is this the cold brain syndrome, or is
- something else involved?" When it is known that the brain has shrunken drastically, and filled up with
- plaques and developed gliosis, we know that something more than a "cold brain" is involved, but we don't
- know how much function could be regained if the hormones were normalized. Every moment of malfunction
- probably leaves its structural mark. Early or late, it is good to prevent the functional errors that lead to
- further damage, and to give the regenerative systems an opportunity to work. Before the final "calcium
- death" described (above) by Fujita, there are many opportunities for intervening to stop or reverse the
- process. The older the person is, the more emphasis should be put on protective inhibition, rather than
- immediately increasing energy production. Magnesium, carbon dioxide, sleep, red light, and naloxone might be
- appropriate at the beginning of therapy.
- </p>
- <p>
- The resting state of a cell is a highly energized state. To the old Pavlovians, the resting state existed at
- two energy levels, and they applied the term "protective inhibition" generally to the depleted state
- (parabiosis) that occurs in exhaustion or coma, but I am using the phrase in a more general sense, that
- seems reasonable now that the concept of "excitotoxic" injury has become current. I mean it to include
- everything which protects against excitotoxic injury. This definition therefore has the virtue of being
- biochemically and physiologically very specific, while retaining the functional and therapeutic significance
- that it had for the Pavlovians. (My book, <em>Mind and Tissue,</em> and the chapter "A unifying principle"
- in <em>
- Generative Energy,</em> discussed the idea of the resting state and protective inhibition.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Ordinary healthy sleep is an example of restorative, protective inhibition. The energy charge, including
- levels of ATP, creatine phosphate, and glycogen storage, regulates many restorative enzyme systems. I have
- suggested (1975, J. Orthomol. Psychiatry) how the entropy-sensitivity or cold-inactivation of an enzyme
- could be involved in shifting the brain toward a state of inhibition. A recent publication (J. H. Benington
- and H. C. Heller, "Restoration of brain energy metabolism as the function of sleep," Progress in Neurobiol.
- 45, 347-360, 1995) has proposed that reduction of energy charge and depolarization of cells act through
- adenosine secretion to restore glycogen stores. Since glycogen stores decrease with aging, this work
- supports the idea that protective inhibition is weakened with aging. (L. N. Simanovskiy and Zh. A. Chotoyev,
- "The effect of hypoxia on glycogenolysis and glycolysis rates in the rat brain," Zhurnal Evolyutsionnoy
- Biokhimii i Fiziologii 6(5), 577-579, 1970.)
- </p>
- <p>
- J. H. Benington and H. C. Heller, "Restoration of brain energy metabolism as the function of sleep," Prog.
- in Neurobiology 45, 347-360, 1995. "...the conditions that have been demonstrated to stimulate adenosine
- release from neural tissue represent either increases in metabolic demand (...activation of excitatory
- receptors) or decreases in metabolic supply (hypoxia, ischaemia, hypoglycemia)...." "In the brain,
- adenosine-stimulated increases in potassium conductance produce hyperpolarization, thereby reducing neuronal
- responsiveness...." "Adenosine release is triggered globally in response to changes in cerebral energy
- homeostasis." "A number of findings provide indirect support for the hypothesis that glycogen stores are
- depleted during waking and restored during sleep." "Reduced availability of glycogen to astrocytes
- must...increase adenosine release...." "Because ATP concentration is 100-fold greater than AMP
- concentration, a minute decrease in cellular energy charge...is translated into a large proportional
- increase in extracellular adenosine cencentration...."
- </p>
- <p>
- The terms "functional quiescence" and "G0 quiescence" are similar in meaning to the resting state; I think
- of cells in the state of "G0 quiescence" as being stem cells, waiting for use in regeneration, but I don't
- subscribe to the idea that they can't be reconstituted from functioning, differentiated cells. In plants,
- dedifferentiation is achieved fairly easily, and in the study of animal cells the trend in that direction
- seems very obvious, though many people keep saying that it just isn't possible. In general, the things such
- as lipid peroxidation or calcium influx which cause cell replication at one level, cause cell death at a
- higher level.
- </p>
- <p>
- Energy to resist stress makes quiescence possible, and prevents the deterioration of cells, of the sort that
- occurs in aging. O. Toussaint, et al., "Cellular aging and energetic factors," Exp. Gerontology 30(1), 1-22,
- 1995. "Experiments performed with endothelial cells in the context of the ischemia-reperfusion toxicity of
- free radicals, also offer good examples of the impact of cell energy on cell resistance to these toxic
- molecules." "...if a supplement of energy is given...the toxic effect of the free radicals is much
- reduced...."
- </p>
- <p>
- The specific approaches of this orientation --to energize but quiet the brain--are diametrically opposed to
- some of the "therapies" for Alzheimer's disease that have been promoted recently by the drug industries:
- Things to increase stimulation, especially to increase cholinergic excitation; even the excitotoxic amino
- acids themselves and their analogs; and estrogen, which is a multiple brain excitant, proconvulsant,
- excitotoxic promoter, and anti-memory agent. Those product-centered publications stand out distinctly from
- the actual research.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are many energy-related vicious circles associated with aging, but the central one seems to be the
- fat-thyroid-estrogen-free-radical-calcium sequence, in which the ability to produce stabilizing substances
- including carbon dioxide and progesterone is progressively lost, increasing susceptibility to the unstable
- unsaturated fats.
- </p>
- <p><strong>EFFECTS OF ESTROGEN AND UNSATURATED FATTY ACIDS</strong></p>
- <p>
- Estrogen production is facilitated when tissue is cooler, and it lowers body temperature. Estrogen and the
- endorphins act together in many ways (including the behavior of estrus), and naloxone (the antagonist of
- morphine and the endorphins) raises body temperature and in other ways opposes estrogen. Naloxone has been
- found to improve the symptoms of demented people, and I have seen it quickly, and dramatically, improve the
- mental clarity of a 60 year old woman who had used estrogen. It, like clonidine (the anti-adrenaline drug),
- is a good candidate for controlling the hot flashes and other symptoms of menopause.
- </p>
- <p>
- In various degenerative brain conditions, blood clotting has been implicated either as a cause or a
- complication. Many people are promoting unsaturated oils for their "anti-clotting" value, in spite of the
- older literature showing that they inhibit proteolytic enzymes and slow clot removal. Several newer
- publications have revealed other aspects of their involvement in thrombus formation. A. J. Honour, et al.,
- "The effects of changes in diet on lipid levels and platelet thrombus formation in living blood vessels,"
- Br. J. Expt. Pathol. 59(4), 390-394, 1978--corn oil caused platelets to be more sensitive to ADP.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Although there is a lot of talk about "membrane fluidity," as a desirable thing, and the loss of unsaturated
- lipids in the aged brain, there are some interesting observations related to "viscosity" in Alzheimer's
- disease. The platelets of Alzheimer's patients are less viscous, and lipids extracted from the brain are
- more fluid, and contain 30% less cholesterol than normal (on a molar basis, in relation to phospholipids).
- (G. S. Roth, et al., 1995.) In general, lipid peroxidation causes cellular viscosity to increase, apparently
- by causing cross-linking of proteins, but I think the significance of the decreased cholesterol relates to
- its significance as precursor to pregnenolone and progesterone, and to the known association with
- Alzheimer's disease of a variant form of the cholesterol transporter protein, ApoE, which I suppose is a
- slightly less stable molecular form that is more susceptible to malfunction in stress.
- </p>
- <p>
- The extracellular matrix is a major factor in the function and stability of brain cells. (L. F. Agnati, et
- al., "The concept of trophic units in the central nervous system," Prog. in Neurobiol. 46, 561-574, 1995.
- Any factor producing edema tends to disrupt the extracellular matrix (Chan and Fishman, 1978, 1980, and L.
- Loeb, 1948.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizures are known to be promoted by estrogen, by unsaturated fats, and by lipid peroxidation, and to cause
- an increase in the size of the free fatty acid pool in the brain. Prolonged seizures cause nerve damage in
- certain areas, especially the hippocampus, thalamus, and neocortex (Siesjo, et al., 1989). Dementia is known
- to be produced by prolonged seizures.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Prenatal exposure to estrogen, to oxygen deficiency, or to unsaturated fats decreases the size of the brain
- at birth. There is apparently a requirement for saturated fats during development (J. M. Bourre, N.
- Gozlan-Devillierre, O. Morand, and N. Baumann, "Importance of exogenous saturated fatty acids during brain
- development and myelination in mice," Ann. Biol. Anim., Biochim., Biophys. 19(1B), 172-180, 1979.
- </p>
- <p>
- Under the influence of estrogen, or unsaturated fats, brain cells swell, and their shape and interactions
- are altered. Memory is impaired by an excess of estrogen. Estrogen and unsaturated fat and excess iron kill
- cells by lipid peroxidation, and this process is promoted by oxygen deficiency. The fetus and the very old
- have high levels of iron in the cells. Estrogen increases iron uptake. Estrogen treatment produces elevation
- of free fatty acids in the blood, and lipid peroxidation in tissues. This tends to accelerate the
- accumulation of lipofuscin, age-pigment. Lactic acid, the production of which is promoted by estrogen,
- lowers the availability of carbon dioxide, leading to impairment of blood supply to the brain.
- </p>
- <p>
- Estrogen stimulates cell division, but can also increase the rate of cell death. Unsaturated fatty acids can
- also stimulate or kill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Both estrogen and unsaturated fats promote the formation of age-pigment. Besides increasing the free fatty
- acid concentration, estrogen possibly depresses the level of cholesterol, both of which are changes seen in
- the senile brain.
- </p>
- <p>
- Estrogen causes massive alterations of extracellular matrix, and seems to promote dissolution of
- microtubules (Nemetschek-Gannsler), as calcium does. Unsaturated fats increase calcium uptake by at least
- some brain cells (H. Katsuki and S. Okuda, 1995.) Unsaturated fats, like estrogen, increase the permeability
- of blood vessels. The unsaturated fat causes edema of the brain, inhibits choline uptake, blocking
- acetylcholine production.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Progesterone is a nerve growth factor, produced by glial cells (oligodendrocytes). It promotes the
- production of myelin, protects against seizures, and protects cells against free radicals. It protects
- before conception, during gestation, during growth and puberty, and during aging. It promotes regeneration.
- Its production is blocked by stress, lipid peroxidation, and an excess of estrogen and iron.
- </p>
- <p>
- Aspirin protects against iron toxicity, clot formation, and reduces lipid peroxidation while blocking
- prostaglandin formation. Aspirin and other antiinflammatory drugs, taken for arthritis, have been clearly
- associated with a reduced incidence of Alzheimer's disease. Aspirin reduces the formation of prostaglandins
- from arachidonic acid.
- </p>
- <p>
- Unsaturated fatty acids, but not saturated fatty acids, are signals which activate cell systems.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many different stimuli can induce cell activity, cell death, or change to another cell type. (J. Niquet, et
- al., "Glial reaction after seizure induced hippocampal lesion: Immunohistochemical characterization of
- proliferating glial cells," J. Neurocytol. 23(10), 641-656, 1994: "...hippocampal astrocytes from
- kainate-treated rats experess A2B5 immunoreactivity, a marker of type-2 astrocytes." "This suggests that in
- the CNS, normal resident astrocytes acquire the phenotypic properties of type-2 astrocytes.")
- </p>
-
- <p>
- A "deficiency" of polyunsaturated fatty acids leads to altered rates of cellular regeneration and
- differentiation, a larger brain at birth, improved function of the immune system, decreased inflammation,
- decreased mortality from endotoxin poisoining, lower susceptibility to lipid peroxidation, increased basal
- metabolic rate and respiration, increased thyroid function, later puberty and decreases other signs of
- estrogen dominance. When dietary PUFA are not available, the body produces a small amount of unsaturated
- fatty acid (Mead acids), but these do not activate cell systems in the same way that plant-derived PUFAs do,
- and they are the precursors for an entirely different group of prostaglandins.
- </p>
- <p><strong>VITAMIN A AND THE STEROIDS</strong></p>
- <p>
- In a variety of cell types, vitamin A functions as an estrogen antagonist, inhibiting cell division and
- promoting or maintaining the functioning state. It promotes protein synthesis, regulates lysosomes, and
- protects against lipid peroxidation. Just as stress and estrogen-toxicity resemble aging, so does a vitamin
- A deficiency. While its known functions are varied, I think the largest use of vitamin A is for the
- production of pregnenolone, progesterone, and the other youth-associated steroids. One of vitamin E's
- important functions is protecting vitamin A from destructive oxidation. Although little attention has been
- given to the effects of unsaturated fats on vitamin A, their destruction of vitamin E will necessarily lead
- to the destruction of vitamin A. The increased lipid peroxidation of old age represents a vicious circle, in
- which the loss of the antioxidants and vitamin A leads to their further destruction.
- </p>
- <p>
- To produce pregnenolone, thyroid, vitamin A, and cholesterol have to be delivered to the mitochondria in the
- right proportion and sufficient quantity. Normally, stress is balanced by increased synthesis of
- pregnenolone, which improves the ability to cope with stress. Lipid peroxidation, resulting from the
- accumulation of unsaturated fatty acids, iron, and energy deficiency, damages the mitochondrias' ability to
- produce pregnenolone. When pregnenolone is inadequate, cortisol is over-produced. When progesterone is
- deficient, estrogen's effect is largely unopposed. When both thyroid and progesterone are deficient, even
- fat cells synthesize estrogen.
- </p>
-
- <p><strong>THE NATURE OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE</strong></p>
- <p>
- Although Alzheimer's disease until recently referred to a certain type of organic dementia occuring in
- people in their thirties, forties and fifties (presenile dementia), structural similarities seen in senile
- dementia have caused the term to lose its original meaning. Alzheimer's sclerosis of blood vessels, and even
- the death of nerve cells, are sometimes neglected in favor of the more stylish ideas, emphasizing certain
- proteins that cause the tangles and plaques. Until recently, the "tangles" were commonly interpreted as the
- debris left after the death of a cell, rather than as one of the processes causing the death of the cell.
- </p>
- <p>
- Alzheimer-type dementia is different from other dementias, but it overlaps with them, and with age-related
- and stress-related changes in other organs.
- </p>
- <p>
- Physical signs (seen at autopsy) of AD:
- </p>
- <p>
- 1) Death of neurons (increase of glial cells),
- </p>
-
- <p>
- 2) Amyloid plaques (extracellular), associated with a particular variant of apolipoprotein E, the epsilon 4
- allele,
- </p>
- <p>
- 3) Fibrillary tangles (intracellular, or remaining after the rest of the cell has disappeared),
- </p>
- <p>
- 4) Amyloid in blood vessels.
- </p>
- <p>
- Functional and biochemical observations:
- </p>
- <p>
- 1) The mitochondrial energy problem, cytochrome oxidase and its regulation; body temperature/pulse-rate
- cycle disturbance; lipid peroxidation; respiratory defect; altered amino acid uptake; memory impairment;
- dominance of the excitatory systems vs. the inhibitory adenosine/GABA/progesterone/pregnenolone system.
- Increased calcium uptake, which is associated with lipid peroxidation and cell death. Increased cortisol and
- DHEA.
- </p>
- <p>
- 2) Deposit of abnormal proteins, such as transthyretin-amyloid; albumin binding of PUFA, vs. transport of
- thyroid and retinol.<em> </em>
-
- Beta-glucuronidase increases, depositing estrogen in cells.<em> </em>(A. J. Cross, et al., "Cortical
- neurochemistry in Alzheimer-type dementia," Chapter 10, pages 153-170 in<em>
- Aging of the Brain and Alzheimer's Disease, Prog. in Brain Res. 70, edited by D. F. Swaab, et al.,
- Elsevier, N.Y., 1986.</em>)
- </p>
- <p>
- <em>3) </em>
- Abnormally phosphorylated (tau) proteins; association with the variant form of Apo E; tau microtubule
- organizing proteins, microtubules are involved in transporting cholesterol; phosphorylation, by the kinase
- systems, regulated by PUFA; the intermediate filaments are generally stress-associated.
- </p>
- <p>
- 4) ApoE, in cytoplasm, involved in cholesterol delivery for pregnenolone synthesis, as in the adrenal; its
- expression regulated by thyroid. Regulation of the side-chain cleaving enzymes; regulation of the
- cholesterol intake and conversion to pregnenolone by the endozepine receptor/GABA receptor, modified by
- progesterone.
- </p>
-
- <p><strong>AN EXAMPLE OF A REGULATORY PROBLEM</strong></p>
- <p>
- Vegetable oil suppresses the thyroid, increasing estrogen. Estrogen and calcium depolymerize microtubules.
- Microtubule transport for Apo E, transthyretin, thyroid, and cholesterol for pregnenolone synthesis is
- disrupted. Transthyretin and Apo E accumulate unused, and deposit in blood vessels, around nerves, and in
- cytoplasm. Pregnenolone and progesterone deficiency (aggravating thyroid deficiency) causes memory loss,
- destabilization of nerve cells, failure of myelin formation, and excess cortisol synthesis. Free radicals
- and calcium cause multiple cell injuries including nerve-death. Estrogen is released by elevated
- beta-glucuronidase. Imbalances of other steroids, including cortisol and DHEA, develop as cells compensate
- for pregnenolone deficiency, causing shifts in balance of glial cells. Hypothyroidism, estrogen excess, free
- unsaturated fats cause increased vascular permeability and brain edema, protein leakage, and alteration of
- the matrix..
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>VIII: STRUCTURE AS A REGULATORY SYSTEM--AN EMERGING VISION OF PERVASIVE EPIGENESIS</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- In the introduction I mentioned that membranous regulation and genetic determination should be considered as
- defunct theories. What I have been saying about self-actualizing systems and the factors that disrupt them
- derives from a view of cell function that has been developing since the 1920s.
- </p>
- <p>
- Around 1940, a Russian biochemist (Oparin, I think) proposed that the enzymes of glycolysis were bound to
- the structure of the cell when they were not in use, and that they were "desorbed" under the conditions that
- required abundant glycolysis. Knowing that concept, in 1970 I proposed that the cell water itself underwent
- a transition under such conditions (which could include increased temperature, reduced oxygen, or nervous or
- hormonal stimulation). Activation of glycolysis is usually explained by the availability of regulatory
- substances such as ammonia, phosphate, and NAD, and many biochemists were content to understand cells in
- terms of test-tube models. But in the last few years, it has become clear that some of these basic
- regulatory molecules do bind to structural components of the cell. (T. Henics, "Thoughts over cell biology:
- A commentary," Physiol. Chem. Phys. & Med. NMR 27, 139-140, 1995.) Although the details aren't clear, it
- is known that hormones and other factors stabilize or destabilize RNA, and that during some of these events
- relevant enzymes bind to the RNA. When these facts are combined with the information that is accumulating on
- splicing and modification of RNA, and the copying of RNA back into DNA, the hereditary system is seen to be
- much more flexible than it was believed to be.
- </p>
- <p>
- A global change of state is able to steer each part of the process, continuously. In this way, the cell
- resembles an analog, rather than a digital, control system: each part is momentarily guided, rather than
- waiting for "feedback."
- </p>
- <p>
- Where before, cellular "regulatory mechanisms" referred to certain feedback mechanisms based on interactions
- of randomly diffusing molecules, the new understanding of the cell sees a highly structured system in which
- very little is random, and the cell's adaptive possibilities, instead of being limited to a certain number
- of genetic switches, are shaped by every imaginable environmental influence. The cell's structure, far from
- being "read out of the genome," is sensitively reshaped constantly by processes that incorporate some of the
- environment in establishing each new stability. The old-model-geneticists have been forced to admit that the
- genes can't specify everything in the organism's structure, and it was the brain's complexity that forced
- this recognition that certain things are developed "epigenetically." But the new fact that most biologists
- are reluctant to accept is that the structure of the cell itself is developed very largely on the basis of
- information received from the environment--that is, "epigenetically."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Traditionally, epigenesis has meant that the form of an embryo or organism didn't preexist, or wasn't
- completely specified by the genes. That is, it has had to do with the relationships between cells. It
- involved a recognition that "cells are clever enough to design an organism." It is a significant step beyond
- that to the recognition that "cells are clever enough to redesign themselves to meet situations never seen
- before."
- </p>
- <p>
- Biologists working with bacteria and yeasts have seen them adapt in non-random ways to novel conditions.
- "Directed mutations" are impossible, according to the "central dogma" that has the support of textbooks and
- most biology professors, but they do occur in those single-celled organisms. Barbara McClintock showed that
- in corn her mobile genes were mobilized by stress. Although this isn't exactly "directed mutation," it is an
- example of a mechanism for increasing adaptation when adaptation is need. There is a certain type of enzyme
- which makes specific cuts in the DNA chain. Biotechnologists find them convenient for their purposes, but
- their presence serves physiological purposes, presumably in all organisms, like those described by
- McClintock in corn. During the terminal stress that produces the special kind of cell death known as
- apoptosis, these enzymes make confetti of the genome.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Poisons, such as estrogen, unsaturated fatty acids, or even radiation, produce different effects at
- different doses. Low doses typically stimulate cell division, larger doses produce changes of cell type and
- altered states of differentiation, and finally, adequate doses produce apoptotic cell death. There is a
- special ideology around apoptosis, which holds that it is "genetically programmed," implying that whenever
- it occurs in the brain, it was destined to happen sooner or later. But in fact, "growth factors" of various
- sorts can prevent it. It is increasingly clear that it represents excessive stress and deficient resources.
- The involvement of the genetic apparatus in differentiation and radical adaptation suggests that the
- (epigenetic) resources of cells are unlimited.
- </p>
- <p>
- The changes that are known to be produced by the poisons that we are habitually exposed to are exactly the
- changes that occur in the aging brain. As I scan over hundreds of studies that define the effects of
- estrogen, unsaturated fats, excess iron, and lipid peroxidation, my argument seems commonplace, even
- trivial, except that I know that it clearly relates to therapies for most of the degenerative diseases, and
- that the great culture-machine is propagating a different view at several points that are essential for my
- argument.
- </p>
- <p>
- They are advancing a myth about human nature, so I will advance a counter-myth. At the time people were
- growing their large brains they lived in the tropics. I suggest that in this time before the development of
- grain-based agriculture, they ate a diet that was relatively free of unsaturated fats and low in iron--based
- on tropical fruits. I suggest that the Boskop skull from Mt. Kilimanjaro was representative of people under
- those conditions, and that just by our present knowledge of the association of brain size with longevity,
- they--as various "Golden Age" myths claim--must have had a very long life-span. As people moved north and
- developed new ways of living, their consumption of unsaturated fats increased, their brain size decreased,
- and they aged rapidly. Neanderthal relics show that flaxseed was a staple of their diet.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Even living in the tropics, there are many possibilities for diets rich in signal-disrupting substances,
- including iron, and in high latitudes there are opportunities for reducing our exposure to them. As a source
- of protein, milk is uniquely low in its iron content. Potatoes, because of the high quality of their
- protein, are probably relatively free of toxic signal-substances. Many tropical fruits, besides having
- relatively saturated fats, are also low in iron, and often contain important quantities of amino acids and
- proteins. In this context, Jeanne Calment's life-long, daily consumption of chocolate comes to mind: As she
- approaches her 121st birthday, she is still eating chocolate, though she has stopped smoking and drinking
- wine. The saturated fats in chocolate have been found to block the toxicity of oils rich in linoleic acid,
- and its odd proteins seem to have an anabolic action.
- </p>
- <p>
- If we really take seriously even the traditional sort of epigenesis, and especially if we accept the deeper
- idea of epigenesis on the level of cellular structure and function, we have to see the organism as a sort of
- "whirlwind of cells," made up of whirlwinds of atoms (in Vernadsky's phrase) in which our way of life sets
- the boundaries within which our cells will restructure themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- The random production of free radicals, rather than acting only by way of genetic damage or protein
- cross-linking, is also able to act as a signalling process, that is, on a strictly physiological level. An
- excess of unsaturated fatty acids itself constitutes a massive distortion of the regulatory systems, but it
- also leads to distortions in the "eicosanoid" system and the increasingly uncontrolled production of free
- radicals, and to changes in energy, thyroid activity, and steroid balance. The aging body, rather than being
- like a car that needs more and more repairs until it collapses from simple wear, is more like a car
- traveling a road that becomes increasingly rough and muddy, until the road becomes an impassable swamp.
- </p>
- <p>
- The suggested therapy is a correction of the signalling process, rather than "genetic surgery,"
- transplantation, etc., which is the pessimistic implication of the doctrine that oxidative damage is simply
- a matter of "wear and tear," "somatic mutations," and "cross-linking." Those problems are reparable, and our
- emphasis should be on the production of energy and the avoidance of the conditions that allow the
- undesirable signals to accumulate.
- </p>
- <p>
- The absence of cancer on a diet lacking unsaturated fats, the increased rate of metabolism, decreased free
- radical production, resistance to stress and poisoning by iron, alcohol, endotoxin, alloxan and
- streptozotocin, etc., improvement of brain structure and function, decreased susceptibility to blood clots,
- and lack of obesity and age pigment on a diet using coconut oil rather than unsaturated fats, indicates that
- something very simple can be done to reduce the suffering from the major degenerative diseases, and that it
- is very likely acting by reducing the aging process itself at its physiological core.
- </p>
- <p>
- Copyright: Raymond Peat, PhD 1997
- </p>
- <p>
- PO Box 5764 Eugene, OR 97405
- </p>
- <p>
- <h3>SELECTED REFERENCES</h3>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Winfried G. Rossmanith, "Gonadotropin secretion during aging in women: Review article," Exp. Gerontology
- 30(3/4) 369-381, 1995. "...major functional derangements, primarily at a hypothalamic rather than a
- pituitary site, have been determined as concomitants of aging in women." "...aging may impair the negative
- feedback sensitivity to ovarian sex steroids...." Hormonal changes at menopause "may represent the sum of
- functional aberrations that were initiated much earlier in life...." "...prolonged estrogen exposure
- facilitates the loss of hypothalamic neurons...."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. R. Brawer, et al., "Ovary-dependent degeneration in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus," Endocrinology 107,
- 274-279, 1980.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- G. C. Desjardins, "Estrogen-induced hypothalamic beta-endorphin neuron loss: A possible model of
- hypothalamic aging," Exp. Gerontology 30(3/4), 253-267, 1995. "This loss of opioid neurons is prevented by
- treatment with antioxidants indicating that it results from estradiol-induced formation of free radicals."
- "...this beta-endorphin cell loss is followed by a compensatory upregulation of mu opioid receptors in the
- vicinity of LHRH cell bodies." Resulting supersensitivity of the cells results "in chronic opioid
- suppression of the pattern of LHRH release, and subsequently that of LH." The neurotoxic effects of
- estradiol cause a "cascade of neuroendocrine aberrations resulting in anovulatory acyclicity." Treatment
- with an opiod antagonist "reversed the cystic morphology of ovaries and restored normal ovarian cycles" in
- estrogen-treated rats.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- G. B. Melis, et al., "Evidence that estrogens inhibit LH secretion through opioids in postmenopausal women
- using naloxone," Neuroendocrinology 39, 60-63, 1984.
- </p>
- <p>
- H. J. Sipe, et al., "The metabolism of 17 beta-estradiol by lactoperoxidase: A possible source of oxidative
- stress in breast cancer," Carcinogenesis 15(11), 2637-2643, 1994. "...molecular oxygen is consumed by a
- sequence of reactions initiated by the glutathione thiyl radical. ...the estradiol phenoxyl radical
- abstracts hydrogen from...NADH to generate the NAD radical." "...the futile metabolism of micromolar
- quantities of estradiol catalyzes the oxidation of much greater concentrations of biochemical reducing
- cofactors, such as glutathione and NADH, with hydrogen peroxide produced as a consequence."
- </p>
- <p>
- S. Santagati, et al., "Estrogen receptor is expressed in different types of glial cells in culture," J.
- Neurochem. 63(6), 2058-2064, 1994. "...in all three types of glial cell analyzed in almost equal amounts..."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- D. X. Liu and L. P. Li, "Prostaglandin F-2 alpha rises in response to hydroxyl radical generated in vivo,"
- Free Radical Biol. Med. 18(3), 571-576, 1995. "Free radicals and some free fatty acids, such as arachidonic
- acid metabolites...may form a feedback loop in which generation of one type leads to formation of the
- other." "Prostaglandin F-2 alpha dramatically increased in response to hydroxyl radical generation...."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. Owens and P. A. Schwartzkroin, "Suppression of evoked IPSPs by arachidonic acid and prostaglandin F-2
- alpha," Brain Res. 691(1-2), 223-228, 1995. "These findings suggest that high levels of AA and its
- metabolites may bias neurons towards excitation."
- </p>
- <p>
- E. A. Quail and G. C. T. Yeoh, "The effect of iron status on glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase
- expression in rat liver," FEBS Lett. 359(2-3), 126-128, 1995. "...the overexpression of GAPDH mRNA in iron
- deficiency is probably due to increased message stability." [This is one of the points discussed by Henics.
- Estrogen, which increases iron retention, also modifies mRNA stability.]
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J. G. Liehr, et al., "4-hydroxylation of estradiol by human uterine myometrium and myoma microsomes:
- Implications for the mechanism of uterine tumorigenesis," Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 92(20), 9220-9224, 1995.
- "... elicits biological activities distinct from estradiol, most notably an oxidant stress response induced
- by free radicals generated by metabolic redox cycling reactions."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. G. Liehr and D. Roy, "Free radical generation by redox cycling of estrogens," Free Rad. Biol. Med. 8,
- 415-423, 1990.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Aschheim, "Resultats fournis par la greffe heterochrone des ovaires dan l'etude de la regulation
- hypothalamo-hypophyso-ovarienne de la ratte senile," Gerontologia 10, 65-75, 1964/65. "Our last experiment,
- grafting ovaries...into senile rats which had been castrated (ovariectomized) when young, and its result,
- the appearance of estrous cycles, seems explicable by this hypothesis. Everything happens as if the long
- absence of ovarian hormones... had kept the cells of the hypothalamus in the state of youth. It's as if the
- messages of the circulating steroids fatigued the hypothalamic memory." "What are the factors that cause
- this diminution of the hypothalamic sensitivity...? Kennedy incriminates a decrease in the cellular
- metabolism in general...."
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Ascheim, "Aging in the hypothalamic-hypophyseal ovarian axis in the rat," pp. 376-418 in: A. V. Everitt
- and J. A. Burgess, editors, Hypothalamus, Pituitary and Aging, C>C> Thomas, Springfield, 1976.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gross, "Reproductive cycle biochemistry," Fertility & Sterility 12(3), 245-260, 1961. "The maintenance
- of an environment conducive to anaerobic metabolism--which may involve the maintenance of an adequate supply
- of the substances that permit anaerobiosis...seems to depend primarily upon the action of estrogen."
- "Glycolytic metabolism gradually increases throughout the proliferative phases of the cycle, reaching a
- maximum coincident with the ovulation phase, when estrogen is at a peak. Following this, glycolysis
- decreases, the respiratory mechanisms being more active during the secretory phase. Eschbach and Negelein
- showed the metabolism of the infantile mouse uterus to be less anaerobic than that of the adult. If estrogen
- is administered, however, there is a 98 per cent increase in glycolytic mechanisms.""The effect of the
- progestational steroids may be such as to interfere with the biochemical pattern required for support of
- this anaerobic environment."
- </p>
- <p>
- C. S. Bangur, J. L. Howland, S. S. Katyare, "Thyroid hormone treatment alters phospholipid composition and
- membrane fluidity of rat brain mitochondria," Biochem. J. 305(1), 29-32, 1995. (Increases fluidity.)
- </p>
- <p>
- R. S. Sohal, et al., "Mitochondrial superoxide and hydrogen peroxide generation, protein oxidative damage,
- and longevity in different species of flies," Free Rad. Biol. & Med. 19(4), 499-504, 1995. Cytochrome C
- oxidase protects against free radical damage. This enzyme depends on thyroid and light.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- D. L. Williams, et al., "Cell surface 'blanket' of apolipoprotein E on rat adrenocortical cells," J. Lipid
- Res. 36(4), 745-758, 1995. "...the zona fasciculata cell is encircled or covered with apoE on all faces of
- the cell. ...this cell surface 'blanket' of apoE participates in the uptake of lipoprotein cholesterol by
- either the endocytic or selective uptake pathways."
- </p>
- <p>
- C. A. Frye and J. D. Sturgis, "Neurosteroids affect spatial reference, working, and long-term memory of
- female rats," Neurobiol. Learn. Memory 64(1), 83-96, 1995. [Female rats take longer to acquire a spatial
- task during behavioral estrus.] M. Warner and J. A. Gustafsson, "Cytochrome P450 in the brain:
- Neuroendocrine functions," Front Neuroendocrinol 16(3), 224-236, 1995. [Discusses the GABA(A) receptor
- active steroids, and the accumulation of pregnenolone in the brain.]
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Robel, et al., "Biosynthesis and assay of neurosteroids in rats and mice: Functional correlates," J.
- Steroid Biochem. Mol. Biol. 53(1-6), 355-360, 1995. [Discusses the effects of pregnenolone and progesterone
- on aggression and learning. The animals which learned most easily had the highest levels of pregnenolone
- sulfate.]
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J. R. Pasqualini, et al., "Effect of the progestagen promegestone (R-5020) on mRNA of the oestrone
- sulphatase in the MCF-7 human mammary cancer cells," Anticancer Res. 14(4A), 1589-1593, 1994. Progestagen
- decreases estrogen sulfatase in mammary cancers. [Sulfatase, like beta-glucuronidase, causes active estrogen
- to be released.]
- </p>
- <p>
- W. J. Trooster, et al., "Treatment of acute experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the Lewis rat with
- the sex hormone progesterone," Int. J. Immunopathol. Pharmacol. 7(3), 183-192, 1994. "...we suggest that
- treatment with progesterone protected against the histological signs of EAE through a peripheral immune
- mechanism."
- </p>
- <p>
- H. L. Koenig, et al., "Progesterone synthesis and myelin formation by Schwann cells," Science (268),
- 1500-1503, 1995. "The high concentrations of progesterone in intact adult nerves also indicate a role for
- this neurosteroid in the slow but continuous renewal of peripheral myelin."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- N. C. Lan and K. W. Gee, "Neuroactive steroid actions at the GABA(A) receptor," Horm. Behav. 28(4), 537-544,
- 1994. Neuroactive steroids "...do not interact with any of the classical cytosolic hormonal steroid
- receptors." "The interaction of neuroactive steroids with GABA(A) receptor is specific to a site on the
- receptor complex distinct from the benzodiazepine and barbiturate modulatory sites."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. F. FierroRenoy, et al., "Three different thyroid hormone receptor isoforms are detected in a pure culture
- of ovine oligodendrocytes," Glia 14(4), 322-328, 1995. "Our results demonstrate that differentiated
- oligodendrocytes express alpha-1 and alpha-2 variant and beta-1 isoforms of TH at the protein level and
- support the notion of a direct impact of thyroid hormones on oligodendrocytes in their regulation of myelin
- synthesis."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. Masse, "Nutrition, thyroid hormones, body temperature, and mortality of elderly patients with acute
- illnesses," Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 62(3), 647-648, 1995.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- E. J. Masoro, "Dietary restriction," Exp. Gerontology 30(3/4), 291-298, 1995. "These antiaging actions
- result from a reduction of energy intake by the animal but are not due to a decrease in metabolic rate per
- unit of lean body mass." [The slowed rate of aging is associated with increased metabolic rate--as if
- metabolic inhibitors accumulate at a slower rate.]
- </p>
- <p>
- D. L. Cheney, et al., "Pregnenolone sulfate antagonizes dizocilpine amnesia: Role for allopregnanolone,"
- Neuroreport 6(12), 1697-1700, 1995. "We and others have shown that allopregnanolone potently modulate
- GABA(A) receptor function whereas 5 alpha-dihydroprogesterone fails to induce rapid changes...."
- </p>
- <p>
- B. S. McEwen and E. Gould, "Adrenal steroid influences on the survival of hippocampal neurons," Biochem.
- Pharmacol 40, 2393-2402, 1990.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- P. W. Landfield, et al., "Hippocampal aging and adrenocorticoids: Quantitative correlations," Science
- 202(8), 1098-1101, 1978.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. M. Dudchenko, et al., "Effect of corticosterone on the macroergic pool and membrane permeability in
- sections of rat hippocampus," Bull. Exp. Biol. & Med. 116(12), 1505-1508, 1993. "...the hippocampus is
- one of the most vulnerable brain structures...." "...a reduction of the oxygen content...causes a sharp
- increase of membrane permeability, which is...in line with the trend toward a decrease of the macroergic
- [energy] content (especially creatine phosphate and ATP content) in the hippocampal cells." "The death of
- hippocampal neurons, triggered...by hyperactivation of the glutamate receptors, is accelerated in the
- presence of" glucocorticoids, while these hormones may be protective against oxygen deficit, by increasing
- the availability of glucose, and possibly of amino acids.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- M. J. Meaney, et al., "Individual differences in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal activity in later life and
- hippocampal aging," Exp. Gerontology 30(3/4), 229-251, 1995. "...glucocorticoids...both increase the toxic
- glutamate signal and decrease the metabolic capacity of neurons to survive." (Glucose is protective.) "Our
- current foxus is on the potential role of progesterone as a modulator of glucocorticoid action."
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Sheng, et al., "Methamphetamine causes reactive gliosis in vitro: Attenuation by the ADP-ribosylation
- inhibitor, benzamide," Life Sciences 55(3), 51-54, 1994
- </p>
- <p>
- N. S. Verkhratsky, "Limbic control of endocrine glands in aged rats," Exp. Gerontology 30(3/4, 415-421,
- 1995. Aging causes "degeneration of pyramidal cells in the hippocampus of humans..., accumulation of
- lipofuscin...,a decrease in the excitability of amygdala medial nuclei and an increased excitability of its
- central nuclei..., and a deterioration of their vascularization." "...stimulation of hippocampus inhibits
- ACTH secretion...and causes a decrease of plasma corticosteroids...."
- </p>
- <p>
- R. M. Sapolsky, et al., "Prolonged glucocorticoid exposure reduces hippocampal neuron number: Implications
- for aging," J. Neurosci. 5 1221, 1985.
- </p>
- <p>
- J. L. W. Yau, Mol. Brain Res. 27(1), 174-178, 1994. "Glucocorticoid excess is associated with hippocampal
- neuronal dysfunction and loss, mainly affecting CA1."
- </p>
- <p>
- B. Nasman, et al., "A subtle disturbance in the feedback regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal
- axis in the early phase of Alzheimer's disease," Psychoneuroendocrinology 20(20, 211-220, 1995. "After 0.5
- mg dexamethasone, serum cortisol levels were significantly less suppressed...."
- </p>
- <p>
- C. Mondadori, "In search of the mechanism of action of the nootropics: New insights and potential clinical
- implications," Life Sci. 55(25-26), 2171-2178, 1994. "...the fact that high levels of corticosteroids
- suppress the effects of the nootropics could also have clinical implications: in the light of the
- observation that the majority of Alzheimer patients have elevated steroid levels it could explain why there
- is always only a small proportion of patients...that respond to treatment with nootropics."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. M. Pasquini and A. M. Adamo, "Thyroid hormones and the central nervous system," Dev. Neurosci. 12(1-2),
- 1-8, 1994. "Among their actions, T3 and T4 have effects on the differentiation of various cell types in the
- rat brain and cerebellum as well as on the process of myelination. Recently, several investigators have
- shown effects of thyroid hormones on myelin protein gene expression."
- </p>
- <p>
- M. Martinez, et al., "Glucose deprivation increases aspartic acid release from synaptosomes of aged mice,"
- Brain Res. 673(1), 149-152, 1995. "...in the absence of glucose in the medium of incubation aspartate and
- glutamate release was higher in old than in young animals." "...there is an age-dependent dysfunction in
- this process linked to energy metabolism disturbance."
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Corbisier, et al., "Bioenergetics of mitochondria determine cell survival in stressful conditions," Prog.
- in Cell Res. (5), 237-241, 1995. "...the growth rate of young or old cells injected with coupled
- mitochondria...was not statistically different."
- </p>
- <p>
- G. Paradies, et al., "Molecular basis of the age-dependent decrease in the cytochrome oxidase activity in
- rat heart mitochondria," Prog. in Cell Res. 5, 243-247, 1995. The activity of cytochrome oxidase "was
- markedly decreased with aging. This decrease was associated with a parallel decrease in the mitochondrial
- respiratory activity." "Cardiolipin content was significantly reduced in mitochondrial membrane from aged
- rats."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- G. C. Ness and Z. H. Zhao, "Thyroid hormone rapidly induces hepatic LDL receptor mRNA levels in
- hypophysectomized rats," Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 315(1), 199-202, 1994.
- </p>
- <p>
- E. M. Mutisya, et al., "Cortical cytochrome oxidase activity is reduced in Alzheimer's disease," J.
- Neurochem. 63(6), 2170-2184, 1994. "These results provide further evidence of a cytochrome oxidase defect in
- Alzheimer's disease postmortem brain tissue. A deficiency in this key energy-metabolizing enzyme could lead
- to a reduction in energy stores and thereby contribute to the neurodegenerative process."
- </p>
- <p>
- G. J. Bu, et al., "Subcellular localization and endocytic function of low density lipoprotein
- receptor-related protein in human glioblastoma cells," J. Biol. Chem. 269(47), 29874-29882, 1994. "Our
- results thus strongly suggest several potential roles for LRP in brain protein and lipoprotein metabolism,
- as well as control of extracellular protease activity."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- V. Vandenbrouck, et al., "The modulation of apolipoprotein E gene expression by 3,3'-5-triiodothyronine in
- HepG(2) cells occurs at transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels," Eur. J. Biochem. 224(2), 463-471,
- 1994. "...thyroid hormone stimulated apoE gene transcription threefold in 24 hours."
- </p>
- <p>
- M. J. Ignatius, et al. "Expression of apolipoprotein-E during nerve degeneration and regeneration," Proc.
- Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 83, 1125-1129, 1986.
- </p>
- <p>
- B. T. Stokes, et al., "Energy depletion, calcium and the cytoskeleton: A model for trophic intervention,"
- pp. 279-292, in Trophic Factors and the Nervous System, L. A. Horrocks, et al., editors, Raven Press, NY,
- 1990. "Injury to neuronal cells is associated with a decline in high energy phosphates, a loss of cation
- homeostasis, and possibly, an increase in reactive oxygen radicals." "Virtually all components of the
- cytoskeleton are either directly or indirectly affected by alterations in calcium metabolism."
- "...calcium-activated proteases may also specifically modulate components of the cytoskeleton." "...ATP
- depletion itself may directly alter the structural components of the neuronal cytoskeleton." "...major
- neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinsonian syndrome, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis...are
- also characterized by changes in the neuronal cytoskeleton."
- </p>
- <p>
- T. Gunther, et al., "Effects of magnesium and iron on lipid peroxidation in cultured hepatocytes," Mol. Cell
- Biochem. 144(2), 141-145, 1995. (Magnesium protects against iron.)
- </p>
- <p>
- K. D. Croft, et al., "Oxidation of low-density lipoproteins: Effect of antioxidant content, fatty acid
- composition and intrinsic phospholipase activity on susceptibility to metal ion-induced oxidation,"
- BBA-Lipid Lipid Metab. 1254(3), 250-256, 1995.
- </p>
- <p>
- J. H. Choi and B. P. Yu, "Brain synaptosomal aging: Free radicals and membrane fluidity," Free Radical Biol.
- Med. 18(2), 133-139, 1995 ("...fluidity loss may be influenced by factors other than cholesterol. We suggest
- that lipid peroxidation may be a major factor in the change in fluidity during the aging process.")
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J. H. Choi and B. P. Yu, "Modification of age-related alterations of iron, ferritin, and lipid peroxidation
- in rat serum," Age 17(3), 93-97, 1994.
- </p>
- <p>
- E. Chiarpotto, et al., "Metabolism of 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal and aging," Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 297(2),
- 477-484, 1995. (Accumulation of unsaturated fat breakdown product in old animals.)
- </p>
- <p>
- H. J. Sipe, et al., "The metabolism of beta-estradiol by lactoperoxidase: A possible source of oxidative
- stress in breast cancer," Carcinogenesis 15(11), 2637-2643, 1994.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- M. J. Endresen, et al., "Effects of free fatty acids found increased in women who develop pre-eclampsia on
- the ability of endothelial cells to produce prostacyclin, cGMP and inhibit platelet aggregation," Scan. J.
- Clin. Lab. Invest. 54(7), 549-557, 1994<em>.</em> "...levels of circulating free fatty acids are increased
- in women who later develop pre-eclampsia long before the clinical onset of the disease." "...linoleic acid
- reduced the thrombin-stimulated prostacyclin release by 30-60%, oleic acid by 10-30%, wheras palmitic acid
- had no effect." "Linoleic acid reduced the endothelial cells" ability to inhibit platelet aggregation by
- 10-45%...."
- </p>
- <p>
- L. A. Norris and J. Bonnar, "Effect of oestrogen dose on whole blood platelet activation in women taking new
- low dose oral contraceptives," Thromb. Haemost. 72(6), 926-930, 1994: "Increased levels of ADP and
- arachidonic acid-induced aggregation were observed in women taking the 30 microgram ethinyloestradiol
- combination. Platelet release of beta-thromboglobulin (beta TG) was also significantly increased. Increased
- collagen-induced aggregation was observed but this failed to reach statistical significance for the
- individual treatment groups.") Estrogen dominance is an essential factor in preeclampsia. Women who have
- died of (eclamptic) convulsions have been found to have massive clots in their brain blood vessels. Much of
- this work had its origin in the 1930s (Shute and others), and was buried by the power of the estrogen
- industry.
- </p>
- <p>
- H. Darmani, et al., "Interferon-gamma and polyunsaturated fatty acids increase the binding of
- lipopolysaccharide to macrophages," Int. J. Exp. Pathol. 75(5), 363-368, 1994.
- </p>
- <p>
- G. Autore, et al., "Essential fatty acid-deficient diet modifies PAF levels in stomach and duodenum of
- endotoxin-treated rats," J. Lipid Mediators Cell Signalling 9, 145-153, 1994. Deficiency of "essential" fats
- decreases damage from endotoxin.
- </p>
- <p>
- N. Auge, et al., "Proliferative and cytotoxic effects of mildly oxidized low-density lipoproteins on
- vascular smooth-muscle cells," Biochem. J. 309(Part 3), 1015-1020, 1995. "The proliferative effect on
- smooth-muscle cells is counterbalanced at high concentrations of mildly oxidized LDLs (or at high oxidation
- levels) by their cytotoxic effect."
- </p>
- <p>
- S. K. Clinton, et al., "The combined effects of dietary fat and estrogen on survival, 7,12-dimethyl-
- benz(a)-anthracene-induced breast cancer and prolactin metabolism in rats," J. Nutr. 125(5), 1192-1204,
- 1995. "Mortality in controls was doubled by feeding a high fat diet...." "...the presence of estrogen may be
- a prerequisite for significant dietary modulation."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- R. Sanchez Olea, et al., "Inhibition by polyunsaturated fatty acids of cell volume regulation and osmolyte
- fluxes in astrocytes," Amer. J. of Physiology--cell physiology 38(1), C96-C102, 1995. "...potent blockers of
- regulatory volume decrease and of the swelling-activated efflux of taurine, D-aspartate, inositol, and I-125
- (used as marker of Cl). ...oleic and ricinoleic acids and saturated fatty acids were ineffective."
- "...polyunsaturated fatty acids directly inhibit the permeability pathways correcting cell volume after
- swelling in cultured astrocytes."
- </p>
- <p>
- M. E. Miller, et al., "Influence of hormones on platelet intracellular calcium," Thrombosis Research 77(6),
- 515-530, 1995. "Platelet intracellular calcium concentration and release was significantly decreased in
- women ingesting tamoxifen compared to controls and significantly increased, as was platelet adhesion, in
- oral contraceptive users." "Only oral contraceptive users had increased sensitivity to aggregating agents.
- (...platelet calcium levels are closely related to the degree of platelet adhesion and aggregation in vivo."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- F. Mercure and G. Vanderkraak, "Inhibition of gonadotropin-stimulated ovarian steroid production by PUFA in
- teleost fish," Lipids 30(6), 547-554, 1995. "EPA and DHA inhibited gonadotropin-stimulated testosterone
- production in a dose-related manner...."
- </p>
- <p>
- A A Farooqui, K Wells, L A Horrocks, "Breakdown of membrane phospholipids in Alzheimer disease--involvement
- of excitatory amino acid receptors," Mol Chem Neuropathol 25(2-3) 155-173, 1995. "The release of
- arachidonate from the sn-2 position of glycerophospholipids is catalyzed by phospholipases and lipases.
- These enzymes are coupled to EAA receptors. Overstimulation of these receptors may be involved in abnormal
- calcium homeostasis, degradation of membrane phospholipids, and the accumulation of free fatty acids,
- prostaglandins, and lipid peroxides. Accumulation of the mentioned metabolites, as well as abnormalities in
- signal transduction owing to stimulation of lipases and phospholipases, may be involved in the pathogenesis
- of the neurodegeneration in AD."
- </p>
- <p>
- Leo Loeb, V. Suntzeff, and E. L. Burns, "Changes in the nature of the stroma in vagina, cervix and uterus of
- the mouse produced by long-continued injections of estrogen and by advancing age," The American Journal of
- Cancer 35(2), 159-174, 1939. Loeb, et al., speak of collagenous deposits as fibrous-hyaline tissue, varying
- from a fibrillar to a homogeneous appearance, and varying in consistency from very dense and glassy in
- appearance, to the softer gelatinous substance between cells and around arteries and glands. This material
- increases with aging and eventually appears between cells in the muscular part of the uterus. With the
- injection of moderate amounts of estrogen, the quantity of the material is increased. When large amounts of
- estrogen are injected, "The connective tissue and muscle appear rarefied, almost as though they were
- perforated by a large number of small holes." "...this condition is presumably due to a deposit of a mixture
- of hyaline material and edematous fluid...." "This process of hyalinization...is counteracted by invasion by
- connective tissue." In this way there may take place in many areas a substitution and organization of the
- hyaline material by connective tissue, in which dilated capillaries may also be visible." "There is a second
- process which in many cases accompanies the invasion and organization of hyaline substance by connective
- tissue, namely a formation, at the margin of the hyaline material, of epithelioid and of small giant cells
- possessing more than one nucleus." "As a rule, the epithelioid cells are seen alone; giant cells are more
- rare." "...the connective-tissue fibrils may in places appear somewhat separated, perhaps by edematous
- fluid." "The first changes consist very likely in the transudation of fluid from the vessels into the
- connective tissue." "It seems, then, that at a very early stage after the beginning of the injections of
- effective doses of estrogen, a liquid substance which separates the connective-tissue elements makes its
- appearance, and that this represents one of the earliest changes induced by the hormone. It may be
- accompanied, or soon followed, by the deposit of a hyaline substance which occurs first between the
- connective-tissue cells, but may extend also to the muscle fibers." "...the deposit of hyaline which
- progressively becomes more and more devoid of connective-tissue cells and blood vessels, is so marked that
- the material acts like a foreign body...." "While it may be found also around blood vessels, such deposits
- are less conspicuous than in other organs in mice, such as the mammary gland.... There is a tendency for the
- hyaline substance to form sheaths around various organs and it is more prominent at the border separating
- different tissues and organs." "In its appearance and in the foreign body reactions which it initiates this
- substance somewhat resembles amyloid, which is readily produced in mice in various groups. The application
- of stains differentiating amyloid from other hyaline material, however, gave negative results."
- </p>
- <p>
- Leo Loeb, V. Suntzeff, and E. L. Burns, "The effects of age and estrogen on the stroma of vagina, cervix and
- uterus in the mouse," Science 88(22, Nov. 4), 1938. "...large amounts of a hyaline substance are deposited,
- which act as foreign bodies and cause the formation of epithelioid and giant cells and an ingrowth of
- connective tissue. Thus an organization of this substance is attempted, which is interrupted, however, by
- renewed deposition of this hyaline material." "No definite statement can be made at present as to the
- chemical nature of this substance and its possible relation to a plasma constituent, except that it is not
- amyloid." "...a very intense fibrosis and hyalinization of the stroma which may induce abnormal reactions in
- the surrounding tissue. In this way it seems to be possible to accelerate and intensify very much some of
- the old age changes in certain organs."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- P. H. Chan and R. A. Fishman, "Brain edema: Induction in cortical slices by polyunsaturated fatty acids,"
- Science 201, 358-369, 1978. "This cellular edema was specific, since neither saturated fatty acids nor a
- fatty acid containing a single double bond had such effect."
- </p>
- <p>
- C. LarssonBackstrom, et al., "Effects of dietary alpha- and gamma-linolenic acids on liver fatty acids,
- lipid metabolism, and survival in sepsis," Shock 4(1), 11-20, 1995. "Dietary GLA reduced survival from
- sepsis."
- </p>
- <p>
- D. Chemla, et al., "Influence of dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids on contractility, inotropy and
- compliance of isolated rat myocardium, J mol Cell Cardiol 27(8), 1745-1755, 1995. "There was a trend towards
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-
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- impaired the Ca2(i) response, indicating a suppressive effect of it. (Agonist-induced increases in
- concentrations of prostacycline PGI 2, and cytosolic Ca2+ were reduced in efad cells.)
- </p>
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- markedly lower PKC activity in liver plasma membranes with slight but significant reduction of the activity
- in the cytosol than did rats fed safflower oil...." "...coconut oil resulted in a higher content of
- diacylglycerols in these membranes than did ingestion of safflower oil, whereas the proportions of saturated
- fatty acids and phospholipids and membrane fluidity were similar between rats ingesting different fats." "It
- seems likely that saturated fats exert various physiological effects on lipid and lipoprotein metabolism, in
- part through PKC pathways."
- </p>
-
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- anti-inflammatory effects...."
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- These enzymes are coupled to EAA receptors. Overstimulation of these receptors may be involved in abnormal
- calcium homeostasis, degradation of membrane phospholipids, and the accumulation of free fatty acids,
- prostaglandins, and lipid peroxides. Accumulation of the mentioned metabolites, as well as abnormalities in
- signal transduction owing to stimulation of lipases and phospholipases, may be involved in the pathogenesis
- of the neurodegeneration in AD."
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- slightly elevated urinary albumin excretion rate, predicts increased atherosclerotic vascular morbidity and
- mortality." "In animal experiments the outflux of albumin and lipids to the arterial wall are highly
- correlated, and both are elevated in atherosclerosis." "...microalbuminuria is an independent marker of
- systemic transvascular albumin leakiness in clinically healthy subjects."
- </p>
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- detected in Huntington's disease patients. Studies of Alzheimer's disease patients have identified decreased
- [mitochondrial] complex IV activity...." "The age-related onset and progressive course of these
- neurodegenerative diseases may be due to a cycling process betwen impaired energy metabolism and oxidative
- stress."
- </p>
- <p>
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- Brain Res. Bull. 35(5-6), 409-412, 1994. "The present results indicate that the regenerative ability of the
- central NE neurons is universal, not limited to the immature brain. ...equipped with a transmitter-specific
- repair mechanism throughout life."
- </p>
-
- <p>
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- reactions," Mol. Cell. Biochem. 137(1), 9-16, 1994. "...free radical-induced irreversible cell injury
- results from a loss of protein thiols."
- </p>
- <p>
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- 1131-1137, 1994. "These data suggest that the entire Alzheimer's brain may be subject to an oxidative
- challenge, but that some brain areas may be more vulnerable than others to the consequent neural damage that
- characterizes the disease."
- </p>
- <p>
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- disorders," CNS Drugs 2(3), 216-233, 1994. "...epidemiological evidence suggests that later in life tobacco
- smoking may offer some protection against Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases."
- </p>
-
- <p>
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- mitochondrial-encoded cytochrome oxidase mRNA in the hippocampal formation," J. Neuropathol. Exp. Neurol.
- 53(5), 508-512, 1994.
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- 1995.
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- across the estrous cycle of the rat," J. Neurophysiol. 74(3), 1095-1108, 1995. "...estradiol augments
- excitatory responses of cerebellar Purkinje cells to...glutamate...."
- </p>
-
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- C. F. Lim, et al., "Influence of nonesterified fatty acid and lysolecithins on thyroxine binding to
- thyroxine-binding globulin and transthyretin," Thyroid 5(4), 319-324, 1995. "Unsaturated nonesterified fatty
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- </p>
- <p>
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- known proteins," Biochemistry (Engl. translation) 59(5), 457-466, 1884.
- </p>
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- Biology & Medicine 19(4), 511-516, 1995.
- </p>
-
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- </p>
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- <p>
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- </p>
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- the mouse produced by long-continued injections of estrogen and by advancing age," The American Journal of
- Cancer 35(2), 159-174, 1939. Loeb, et al., speak of collagenous deposits as fibrous-hyaline tissue, varying
- from a fibrillar to a homogeneous appearance, and varying in consistency from very dense and glassy in
- appearance, to the softer gelatinous substance between cells and around arteries and glands. This material
- increases with aging and eventually appears between cells in the muscular part of the uterus. With the
- injection of moderate amounts of estrogen, the quantity of the material is increased. When large amounts of
- estrogen are injected, "The connective tissue and muscle appear rarefied, almost as though they were
- perforated by a large number of small holes." "...this condition is presumably due to a deposit of a mixture
- of hyaline material and edematous fluid...." "This process of hyalinization...is counteracted by invasion by
- connective tissue." In this way there may take place in many areas a substitution and organization of the
- hyaline material by connective tissue, in which dilated capillaries may also be visible." "There is a second
- process which in many cases accompanies the invasion and organization of hyaline substance by connective
- tissue, namely a formation, at the margin of the hyaline material, of epithelioid and of small giant cells
- possessing more than one nucleus." "As a rule, the epithelioid cells are seen alone; giant cells are more
- rare." "...the connective-tissue fibrils may in places appear somewhat separated, perhaps by edematous
- fluid." "The first changes consist very likely in the transudation of fluid from the vessels into the
- connective tissue." "It seems, then, that at a very early stage after the beginning of the injections of
- effective doses of estrogen, a liquid substance which separates the connective-tissue elements makes its
- appearance, and that this represents one of the earliest changes induced by the hormone. It may be
- accompanied, or soon followed, by the deposit of a hyaline substance which occurs first between the
- connective-tissue cells, but may extend also to the muscle fibers." "...the deposit of hyaline which
- progressively becomes more and more devoid of connective-tissue cells and blood vessels, is so marked that
- the material acts like a foreign body...." "While it may be found also around blood vessels, such deposits
- are less conspicuous than in other organs in mice, such as the mammary gland.... There is a tendency for the
- hyaline substance to form sheaths around various organs and it is more prominent at the border separating
- different tissues and organs." "In its appearance and in the foreign body reactions which it initiates this
- substance somewhat resembles amyloid, which is readily produced in mice in various groups. The application
- of stains differentiating amyloid from other hyaline material, however, gave negative results."
- </p>
- <p>
- Leo Loeb, V. Suntzeff, and E. L. Burns, "The effects of age and estrogen on the stroma of vagina, cervix and
- uterus in the mouse," Science 88(22, Nov. 4), 1938. "...large amounts of a hyaline substance are deposited,
- which act as foreign bodies and cause the formation of epithelioed and giant cells and an ingrowth of
- connective tissue. Thus an organization of this substance is attempted, which is interrupted, however, by
- renewed deposition of this hyaline material." "No definite statement can be made at present as to the
- chemical nature of this substance and its possible relation to a plasma constituent, except that it is not
- amyloid." "...a very intense fibrosis and hyalinization of the stroma which may induce abnormal reactions in
- the surrounding tissue. In this way it seems to be possible to accelerate and intensify very much some of
- the old age changes in certain organs."
- </p>
-
- <p>
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- pituitary site, have been determined as concomitants of aging in women." "...aging may impair the negative
- feedback sensitivity to ovarian sex steroids...." Hormonal changes at menopause "may represent the sum of
- functional aberrations that were initiated much earlier in life...." "...prolonged estrogen exposure
- facilitates the loss of hypothalamic neurons...."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. R. Brawer, et al., "Ovary-dependent degeneration in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus," Endocrinology 107,
- 274-279, 1980.
- </p>
-
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- treatment with antioxidants indicating that it results from estradiol-induced formation of free radicals."
- "...this beta-endorphin cell loss is followed by a compensatory upregulation of mu opioid receptors in the
- vicinity of LHRH cell bodies." Resulting supersensitivity of the cells results "in chronic opioid
- suppression of the pattern of LHRH release, and subsequently that of LH." The neurotoxic effects of
- estradiol causes a "cascade of neuroendocrine aberrations resulting in anovulatory acyclicity." Treatment
- with an opiod antagonist "reversed the cystic morphology of ovaries and restored normal ovarian cycles" in
- estrogen-treated rats.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- G. B. Melis, et al., "Evidence that estrogens inhibit LH secretion through opioids in postmenopausal women
- using naloxone," Neuroendocrinology 39, 60-63, 1984.
- </p>
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- H. J. Sipe, et al., "The metabolism of 17 beta-estradiol by lactoperoxidase: A possible source of oxidative
- stress in breast cancer," Carcinogenesis 15(11), 2637-2643, 1994. "...molecular oxygen is consumed by a
- sequence of reactions initiated by the glutathione thiyl radical. ...the estradiol phenoxyl radical
- abstracts hydrogen from...NADH to generate the NAD radical." "...the futile metabolism of micromolar
- quantities of estradiol catalyzes the oxidation of much greater concentrations of biochemical reducing
- cofactors, such as glutathione and NADH, with hydrogen peroxide produced as a consequence."
- </p>
- <p>
- S. Santagati, et al., "Estrogen receptor is expressed in different types of glial cells in culture," J.
- Neurochem. 63(6), 2058-2064, 1994. "...in all three types of glial cell analyzed in almost equal amounts..."
- </p>
-
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- Free Radical Biol. Med. 18(3), 571-576, 1995. "Free radicals and some free fatty acids, such as arachidonic
- acid metabolites...may form a feedback loop in which generation of one type leads to formation of the
- other." "Prostaglandin F-2 alpha dramatically increased in response to hydroxyl radical generation...."
- </p>
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- alpha," Brain Res. 691(1-2), 223-228, 1995. "These findings suggest that high levels of AA and its
- metabolites may bias neurons towards excitation."
- </p>
- <p>
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- expression in rat liver," FEBS Lett. 359(2-3), 126-128, 1995. "...the overexpression of GAPDH mRNA in iron
- deficiency is probably due to increased message stability." [This is one of the points discussed by Henics.
- Estrogen, which increases iron retention, also modifies mRNA stability.]
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J. G. Liehr, et al., "4-hydroxylation of estradiol by human uterine myometrium and myoma microsomes:
- Implications for the mechanism of uterine tumorigenesis," Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 92(20), 9220-9224, 1995.
- "... elicits biological activities distinct from estradiol, most notably an oxidant stress response induced
- by free radicals generated by metabolic redox cycling reactions."
- </p>
- <p>
- J. G. Liehr and D. Roy, "Free radical generation by redox cycling of estrogens," Free Rad. Biol. Med. 8,
- 415-423, 1990.
- </p>
- <p>
- F. Fourrier, Circ. Shock 43(4), 171-178, 1994, "High estrogen levels were specifically observed in patients
- with sepsis and septic shock, either males or females." "Circulating T levels were decreased in all male
- patients."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J. A. Jarvis, et al., "H-1 NMR analysis of fibril-forming peptide fragments of transthyretin," Int. J. Pept.
- Protein Res. 44(4), 388-398, 1994. "...fragments of the protein transthyretin, previously shown to form
- cross beta-sheet amyloid-like fibrils in vitro, were investigated...."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- © Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
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