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IMPACT ON HEALTH
Red Wine Compound Helps Heart, May Slow Aging
Resveratrol, a compound found in grapes, red wine,
pomegranates and certain other foods, may protect the heart
and slow the effects of aging, a new study suggests.
Tests in mice revealed that low doses of resveratrol
mimic the effects of caloric restriction diets with 20
percent to 30 percent fewer calories than a typical diet
that have been shown to extend life span.
Previous research has shown that high doses of
resveratrol prevent early death in mice fed a high-fat diet.
This new study adds to those findings, showing that
receiving low doses of resveratrol in middle age offers many
of the benefits as a calorie-reduced diet.
"This brings down the dose of resveratrol toward the
consumption reality mode. At the same time, it plugs into
the biology of caloric restriction," co-senior author
Richard Weindruch, a professor of medicine at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison, said in a prepared statement.
"Resveratrol is active in much lower doses than
previously thought and mimics a significant fraction of the
profile of caloric restriction at the gene expression
levels," co-senior author Tomas Prolla, a professor of
genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said in a
prepared statement.
The researchers found that resveratrol affected
age-related gene expression changes in the heart tissue of
mice. The study was published online last week in the Public
Library of Science One.
"There must be a few master biochemical pathways
activated in response to caloric restriction, which in turn
activate many other pathways. And resveratrol seems to
activate some of these master pathways as well," Prolla
said.
DSM Nutritional Products of Switzerland and the U.S.
National Institutes of Health funded the study.
(HealthDay News)

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