For the first time we could take an old brain and we could give factors from a young organism and ask is that going to change the age of the brain and that's indeed what it did. So we saw that uh there stem cells in the brain of these mice that they got reactivated there was less inflammation more activity um that we can measure in the brain and then most importantly we actually saw that their memory function improved. Welcome To the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science [music] and science-based tools for everyday life. [music] I'm
Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and opthalmology at Stamford School of Medicine. My guest today is Dr. Tony Weiss Corey. Dr. Tony Weiss Corey is a professor of neurology at Stamford School of Medicine and an expert in identifying factors that can help prevent and reverse organ. Today we discuss the factors that are present in young blood. Yes, you heard that right. And the factors that are present in blood after exercise that have been shown to rejuvenate the brain and other tissues in older individuals. Dr. Dr. Tony Weiss Cory's lab has discovered several proteins
that are present in high amounts when we are young and that circulate in the blood and that diminish with age and if these are supplied to the aged body and brain Can reverse key features of aging including improved cognition, tissue recovery from stress, damage and more. We also discussed how aging is nonlinear. It does not progress uniformly across the lifespan. And we discussed the fact that there are certain phases such as puberty, your early 40s and your early 60s when aging is accelerated and then slows again. We also discuss how different organs in your body
age at different rates and how You can measure that. Today's discussion is a very important one because so often these days we hear about anti-aging and longevity. But today you're going to hear about the real science of organ rejuvenation. We also are going to talk about the role of sunlight, fasting, hormones, and the use of specific molecular approaches to improve your vitality and health. We also of course discuss exercise and social interactions, but in the context of the Specific molecules they release into your blood to promote and enhance health and how you can leverage that
information. Tony Weiss Corey is a celebrated pioneer in the science of these topics because of the rigor he applies to the work. He's not just talking about some molecule that someday there'll be a drug or some activity that we already know promotes health. He's an avid tool developer for measuring and reversing aging. So today we discuss all Of that and you're sure to come away from the discussion with both tools to improve your immediate and long-term health as well as a deeper understanding of the biology. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast
is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is however part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, Today's episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Dr. Tony Weiss Corey. Dr. Tony Weiss Corey. Welcome. >> Thank you. >> Great to see another Stanford colleague here. >> You're a true pioneer. Your work is the first work that I heard of where somebody did a serious experiment taking blood from a younger organism, putting
it into an older organism and observing Very interesting things. If you would, could you tell us about that experiment and what if anything has been done in humans to examine whether young blood, such a loaded term, but young blood can be a rejuvenation factor for the more mature body or brain? >> Yeah. So we were actually not the first ones. Um >> okay >> but we collaborated with um the person who in sort of in more modern times uh Used this model again. It's called parabiosis where um you have a surgical model where an old
and a young mouse are paired and their circulation allows for exchange of blood from the young to the old animal. And my my colleague who uh recruited me actually to Stanford Tom Rando used this model to study aging of stem cells in the muscle. So he discovered that with old age the muscle sort of deteriorates and and doesn't regenerate. And when he used the mouse, An old mouse and paired it with a young mouse and then now this young circulation um infusing if you will the old muscle, he regenerated that muscle and u it looked
almost like a young muscle. uh and at the same time we also observed effects in other tissues including in the brain and that's when we started to collaborate um and and explored uh what could the effects of the brain uh of of young Factors on the brain uh be and in part we were also intrigued by that because we had separate studies in humans where we tried to find blood signatures of Alzheimer's disease and what we noticed is that we could see proteins that were correlated or even predictive of Alzheimer's disease. But the most striking
difference was between younger and older people. So we saw that the concentration of their proteins was very different in young people and old People. And when you see something like that in biology always ask is this cause or effect? So do the proteins in our body change because they respond to the aging of the brain for example or do they actually drive the aging of the brain? And here Tom had this model that allowed him to ask that question or that allowed us together to ask that question because for the first time we could take
an old brain and we could give factors from a young organism and ask is that Going to change the age of the brain and that's indeed what it did. So we saw that uh there's stem cells in the brain of these mice that they got reactivated. There was less inflammation, more activity um that we can measure in the brain with um electrical activity of neurons. And then most importantly, we actually saw that their memory function improved. And so to your question, is that relevant for humans? So we actually try to translate that and we can
talk More about this where that the stage of that field is right now to see whether that can be translated. Yeah, I would love to hear more about that. I um realize in your description that most of us think about blood of course delivering oxygen and red blood cells etc etc but of blood that's drawn as a good not the only but a good window into the health status the age status of a of an organism including us but what I'm Hearing is that it's also delivering nutrients or proteins of some kind that can reverse
some sort of clock and we'll get into later whether or not it's an organ specific clock or a bodywide clock. But I think um bloodborne factors generally I think of as a readout not um as a medicine but you're talking about bloodborne factors as medicine. >> Yeah. I think that's really the fascinating aspect of of of of this work That over the past few years people started to look at that many of these uh proteins and probably other molecules in the blood, they're not just reflecting the status of the of the body, if you will,
but they're actively influencing how it works. And the composition changes dramatically from young to old. We have this picture that I always like to show when I give a a talk about our work where we have um several thousand individuals and we measure 3,000 Proteins in them and then we use collars to show low levels or high levels of proteins and you see this dramatic change from young people to old people in a way that you can pick one sample and you can say this person must be about that old. And we can talk more
about what people call clocks. But to your question, yes, there are factors in the blood that clearly can change the function of cells and organs. And what the field is trying to figure out is What are the key ones, which ones could we use to slow down aging or to keep the body healthy as long as you live. So what has been done in humans in terms of an equivalent or pseudoe equivalent experiment to the parabios experiment you described? >> To try to translate that um we started a company alkaist. Um to to see whether
factors from the blood of individuals could influence first of all aging of a mouse brain. So we took blood from young People or old people and injected into mouse brain. we could show that young blood um could in fact mimic the effects of young mouse blood. So there were the similar factors in humans as in mice. And then we went a step further and worked uh collaborated very closely with a company um called Griffles who is producing clinical medicines um for for hospitals based on plasma donation. So they have centers where volunteers donate plasma and
then they Pull this and they isolate uh for example antibodies. So if you're immuno deficient or you had cancer therapy and you you are uh immunosuppressed you will get regular infusions of antibodies that are sourced from healthy people from these volunteers. Also if you lose a lot of blood you may get albamine which is the main protein in our blood. So this company had this manufacturing process where they collect thousands of donations and they process It into different medicines and this allowed us to test these different fractions and see which ones have an effect in
the mice. And again we could find some of them that really were more powerful than others. And so we started some clinical trials in patients with Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease and infused them with these fractions that we've shown uh have uh effects in mice and these were small trials but they looked promising and They're related to what people have been observing previously that if you get a blood transfusions often people have sort of feel invigorated it or their mind they say their mind got cleared or they they improved and this company actually Griffles had
also run a clinical study that was blinded placebo controlled in patients with Alzheimer's disease where they first removed their plasma this is called therapeutic plasma exchange and Then infused them back with um a major blood component this albamine which also contains other factors and they saw for clear significant benefits and this was in 500 patients. So the field is trying to figure out next steps and hopefully do really one of these large clinical studies where you can then say this actually works and could get FDA approval. Have you done one of these? >> I haven't.
I haven't. >> Are you close with anyone who who has? >> I know people who have done it. Yes. And I know people who as a response actually then supported the research that we have to been doing in this field. Um there are companies now that offer this what is called therapeutic plasma exchange and there was a small trial that was again placebo controlled in 40 individuals uh from a company called circulate therapeutics and they then looked in these individuals. These are healthy Older people and they use some of these measures that allow us to
assess how old an organ how old the body is or how old an organ is called epigenetic clocks. Um, and they could indeed see that some of the uh organs looked younger or the body overall looked younger. There's some improvements in function. Not dramatic but suggesting that there might be something there. I'd like to take a quick break to acknowledge one of our sponsors, David. David makes protein bars unlike any other. Their newest bar, the Bronze Bar, has 20 gram of protein, only 150 calories, and zero gram of sugar. I have to say, these are
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pick an injury. I can also imagine a situation where the blood of very Healthy vigorous younger organisms is devoid of all of that. So, when I'm thinking about what could be in young blood that could be rejuvenating, I can imagine that there's sort of a possible double dissociation there. That as we get older, we're having little, let's just call them micro injuries that we're not aware of all the time. And that infusing young blood into that person um would make Them feel better. So, you're counteracting the bad stuff. But there's another picture where you're supplying
something that's pro- youthful. Do you know whether or not the proteins that are contained in young blood are inhibiting the damage induced bad stuff or it's supplying something that is really a kind of a youthful factor? Two different things. >> Yeah. Yeah. >> Right. And and you could see where they Would interact. But the reason I'm getting granular here is because I think ultimately for a therapeutic you'd want to be able to um dissociate between these two. >> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, it totally makes sense. And in a short I answer it. It's all of
the above. >> Um, so what we see is with age there's an increase in many what we call inflammatory proteins and we actually identified some and in mice if we knock Them out or if we neutralize them then cognition improves in the mice in old mice. So there you have examples of uh factors and actually natural factors that can inhibit some of these detrimental factors. But then you have also um active progrowth factors, growth factors that um stimulate the activity of cells and might you know maintain stem cells better. So they're they're truly beneficial factors,
right? The challenge in this field has been to Figure out which ones are the most important ones and is there a a smallest possible number of factors that you would need to have an effect, right? Sort of a cocktail. >> Now, you could say our blood is nature's cocktail, right? It's the the alexia of youth. It just sort of or it's the fountain of youth that lives in us, but it dries out as we get older. But it also accumulates. There's also an accumulation of bad stuff. So it's not Just a loss of that fountain.
We have now tools where we can in mice again we can look at every cell in the body of a mouse and we can ask how does to the cells in an old mouse respond to young blood. And what you see is that almost every cell changes their behavior when we measure their transcript. So their gene expression in these cells but they respond in different ways and it's expected because they have different what we call receptors. So one cell may Respond to one factor and another cell to another one. And what's also interesting we see
a lot of stem cells seem to be targets of these young factors which sort of proves what what we originally described but now in an unbiased way. We look at everything and we ask what are the major effects and then you what you also see that some organels such as mitochondria these are the energy producer units in in inside cells they are key targets of these Rejuvenating effects. So it all makes sense based on what we know from the aging field, what we know from stem cells and maintenance of stem cells. But pinpointing which factor
you would need to have this rejuvenating effect or which one you have to block has been extremely challenging because you almost have to go into the organism and then we call this crisper tools where you can knock out one gene after another and ask which One is the important one. We can't really do this easily in vivo yet, but that's almost what we need to do. So, unfortunately, in the past 10 years, you know, there's individual factors that people keep describing, but I think we have not really come up with a good method to integrate
multiple different factors that could provide or sort of an amplified benefit and mimic what what nature is doing. >> Should I be banking my blood? You don't Have to um because what we find even though there's differences clear differences from one person to another overall if you have the blood of a young person that blood has overall the similar concentrations from another young person and it would still be beneficial to you. So all the blood that we ever used in our studies was always a pool from multiple individuals and that still has the beneficial effect.
So for for these Type of studies, you would not have to bank your own blood. >> Is the lore around Dracula based on this general logic? And if so, how do you think that lore arose? Meaning, I don't think somebody sat back and thought, "Oh, I can make up this story about this Count Dracula who, you know, drank youthful blood." And um I mean, does that mean that >> experiments were being done long ago? I'm not trying to get gruesome here, but We know for instance blood letting and a bunch of other um you know
scientifically dubious uh uh things have been used throughout history. But then again to reduce iron load in the blood, some people will give blood. Um it's also a nice thing to do for your blood bank. They need blood in hospitals and too much iron load isn't good. We know that. So what's known about the origins of the Dracula story visa v the science that we are now aware of? >> Yeah. sort of in retrospect, I think where they came from is maybe more that people realize that, you know, blood is this essential fluid. If you
get a cut and you bleed too much, you're dead, right? >> Um but then maybe also associated it with um with age or youthfulness. I don't know exactly how we have not done and you know this question came up many times before. We have actually never fed mice young blood. You could try that, Right? To because it would have to be absorbed. The factors would have to be absorbed into the body. >> I wouldn't be surprised if some of them wouldn't have beneficial effects and survive sort of the the you know the the the the
stomach um acid environment of the stomach, but uh nobody's ever done it. I don't know where it comes from but it's [gasps and laughter] yeah I mean there's a lot of these questions and blood letting too you know it's blood Thinning also right the >> um these leeches release factors into the blood >> and they must have done something otherwise people would probably not have done it it's pretty wild I again not I'm not trying to be gruesome or medieval here it's just you know now and again something from the historical text shows up >>
in um modern science and we kind of go, well, there's sort of a mapping of of Some of the past to to something that is, you know, clearly of a scientific validation. I'm not promoting drinking blood. I'm interested in organ specific rates of aging. >> Um, and then I also want to circle back to organ specific delivery of nutrients because what you're talking about is blood infusion goes everywhere. It goes into the general circulation. you've mainly focused on the brain, but um it's possible that certain organs are more uh Receptive to these youthful factors than
others. I mean, even the brain has a bloodb brain barrier. The gonads have a blood gonad barrier for interesting reasons. What is known about the rates of aging in different organs? >> Do they happen in parallel or no? And how different organs respond to these youthful factors? >> Yeah. So it's really interesting that you know intuitively you think an organism just ages sort of as a whole in Synchrony we would say right but what uh researchers have discovered and this was first I think Monica Driscoll uh was the first to show in worms that when
she looked at at the ultraructural level that some of these organs in the worm seem to look more aged than others and over the years now we have molecular tools where we can look at a single cell level or within an organ. And what we clearly see is that organs and cells within uh an organism can have slightly Different rates of aging. And the way we conclude that is if we look at all these tissues in many different organism and we every you know period of weeks or months in mice for example we harvest tissues
from different animals. We can see these trajectories that some of them are relatively stable for a long time and then they start to decline where others continue decline from early adulthood and and yet others you know may maintain almost until the animal Expires. So that allows you then on an individual level to ask if you compare now one individual to another, do their organs age exactly in the same way or is maybe there a person um whose heart ages a little bit faster than their actual the rest of their body and in another person it
would be the lung or the brain. And that's indeed what we seem to be seeing. And [clears throat] the way we did this in humans and maybe We can talk about this now is again we look at these proteins and there's company companies now that can look at thousands of proteins in a drop of blood and this is not Sranos. This is this actually real um platforms real science where uh in in just a drop of blood there's companies that measure 11,000 proteins. Now the concentration of these 11,000 proteins and there's large population based cohorts
uh where people follow healthy people over Two decades or even longer now and they collected blood and so we can profile this blood now and we can ask are proteins in that blood related to what diseases people develop or how they age. And the way how we make this what people call a clock for a specific organ is we look in your blood for proteins for example from the brain. So out of these thousands of proteins that we can measure in the blood. Some of them originate from your brain. Some Originate from the lung, from
the liver, from the heart. And we've always used that in clinical medicine, but we measure only a handful of proteins. It's usually a few liver proteins, a few heart proteins and we use them to assess injury or um uh loss of function. So if your liver is damaged, that's what we detect. But here we have now an opportunity to look in thousands of people at proteins that come for example from the liver and ask how do they Change with age? And that allows us to then estimate the age of the liver in an individual. And
what we find is that for most people, the age of your organs is pretty much in sync with your body. But for some individuals, you have more or less of a deviation. So your liver may age faster um than that of the rest of the population and the rest of your body. And what is really super exciting, we call this an age gap. So the difference Between your actual age and the estimated age of your organ. And that's a very strong predictor of your future risk to develop disease in that organ. >> So in other
words, if your heart shows to age faster, you're more likely to get heart disease or a heart attack. If your kidney ages fast, you're going to get kidney disease. If your brain ages faster, you're more likely going to get Alzheimer's disease. >> Is this a test that anyone can now take? Is it commercially available? >> Yeah. So, that's a great question. We started a company uh with Paul Ketta um called Vero Biosciences. Vero Vero Biosciences. And the mission is really to profile the age of organs to ideally eradicate chronic diseases and to um maintain or
to predict which organ is going to age. Because what we find is that if you have an organ that ages faster, if you can detect that and you can do an intervention, you can Potentially delay aging, right? And extend health span. And this is really the mission of uh of Vero. The Vero Compass uses a combination of this biological signature together with clinical and wearable data to create a platform that can predict how you respond, which or first of all which organ is the most sensitive, which intervention you can use and then whether your organ
responds or not by repeated testing and sort of creating a Continuous loop where >> I tell you which organ is of concern. You get medical advice based on other data that uh we can obtain from you and then you may get an intervention could be a classic medical treatment >> but it could also be a change in your lifestyle exercise change of diet type of exercise but have it tailored >> to your specific needs and then we can test does that intervention actually change the age of your organ. It seems Spectacular. I realized in addition,
let's say I were going to start a new medication. Um maybe uh taking a new drug for ADHD. Not for me. I don't have ADHD fortunately. But you know, people are doing this all the time now, trying different drugs for different things or uh taking something to lower their APO as it were. And then you could monitor how that impacts for better or worse >> the the age of a particular organ or or set of organs. >> Exactly. Absolutely. So in many diseases, complex diseases, Alzheimer's disease in particular, we know that people have probably different
forms of Alzheimer's disease and we know there are risk factors that predispose you to have Alzheimer's disease, but most of the trials now are done in all comers with the disease who already have the diagnosis. And so you could imagine that if you have these predictors of change, the predictors of risk and you get Actually more resolution and we can talk about that in a minute. What the next stages of this type of research, you may get different profiles in people and say okay let's test this new drug in this type of Alzheimer's disease who
has a very particular risk profile uh rather than in everyone. and then the drug fails. I think we may have tested a lot of drugs out there that might actually be beneficial, but because we apply them to everyone and we apply them Too late, they fail and we throw them away. >> Yeah. We had um David Fagenbomb, Dr. Dr. David Fagenbomb, he's an MD uh University of Pennsylvania professor of medicine um who himself was diagnosed with Castleman's disease and took it upon himself to try essentially every approved drug as a lastditch effort. He was dying
basically and he came up with a combination a small kit of already approved medications and he's now been Alive 11 years since his essentially death diagnosis or excuse me death prognosis. Um and he has a a a um not for-p profofit called every cure where people with um diseases that have resisted all other forms of treatment people can go there and they use AI to come up with you know reasonable candidates to try because as he he said exactly what you said which is that many of the solutions to diseases that are common may already
Exist but they've been swamped by the variation in those diseases when when looked at in clinical trials. So, uh, the idea that we're that we're already sitting on good treatments and cures that wouldn't have to pass through all the testing is very interesting. There's also very little incentive for drug companies to invest in those because they've passed through their um, patent window. So, there's not a lot of money to be made. >> Sometimes another problem. >> I have a question that I promise I'm just going to be I I've had this podcast long enough to
know that I don't tap dance around things anymore. David Sinclair has been very um I'm not trying to attack David but I want to know David has been very vocal about NAD and the NMN pathway which is you know upstream of of and NR others have talked about NR there's you know true niogen I'm not trying to go after any one person or Company but for a while there was a lot of excitement mainly generated by David that um NAD which goes down across development into adulthood uh might be a prolongevity treatment. I confess I
take NMN um powder. I don't get paid to say this. I know I won't doesn't even matter what company I get it from cuz I buy it like everybody else. Um I don't have any belief that it's going to increase my Lifespan, but it seems to have a pro energy effect that I like. For some reason, it makes my hair grow very fast and my nails grow very thick, which is a side effect I wasn't looking for. >> Okay, maybe I should try it, too. My sister experiences the same thing. But you know, this is
all anecdata, right? Again, I make no money for saying this, but >> I've seen a lot of criticism of the NAD hypothesis of longevity. And so, is There any evidence that increasing NAD levels either through NMN or through NR or direct infusion or injection of NAD, any of those things can actually extend the lifespan of humans and or experimental models. >> Yeah. Yeah, I mean this is not my area of expertise but um just as a blank statement there is no human intervention that can extend lifespan that has been tested or validated. There are many
that Have shown beneficial effects in animal models including NMN and you know all these metabolites. Um there's actually a clinical study that shows that if you take these supplements they increase your levels in the blood. That's a good clinical study, but it doesn't show that it has an effect on lifespan or even on frailty or any other tangible outcome. And this is the case with many other medications that might be beneficial, but they have simply not been tested in A clinical trial. They have been tested in disease sometimes and they are you know very good
drugs to treat a person who is sick but they have not test been tested in healthy >> elder people and see whether they reduce aging or increase health span. There's really nothing out there except exercise and diets. Um those have sort of proven um effects. There's a very good study from a researcher in in in Singapore who tested 10 different preparations of of NMN and she found that many of them actually don't contain what is on the label. >> That doesn't surprise me >> and that's the case for most supplements for half the supplements. There's,
you know, many resources out there you can check or you can just ask CHPT. Um there's not in there what it says. And with NMN apparently and according to Chachi PT um is very unstable and so it it degrades quite quickly. So you want To make sure I think with any supplement if you want to try it make sure it's from a good source >> um and that it has that it has been third party tested. Yeah. And and and you use it within the you know >> time frame. >> Yeah. No, I I appreciate
you saying that. I um like I said, I I don't expect to live longer because of taking NAD. I just sort of like the effect that it appears to give me. I'd like to talk About the relationship between things that increase vitality that are abundant in youth versus their possible role in decreasing longevity. I've been fascinated by this for a long time. So, um bear with me here. Uh and I'll try and set the stage and then I'll be quiet. Puberty is perhaps the fastest rate of aging that we undergo in our entire lifespan. Within
two years, we transform as an organism. Right? Some people Progress through puberty much faster. Other people seem to have a more protracted puberty. And here I'm defining puberty as the acquisition of secondary sex characteristics, facial hair, etc. Uh uh reproductive uh ability, etc. Okay. So um puberty is a constellation of things that obviously differs in males and females. It's correlated with hormones like testosterone, estrogen, gonadotropins, etc. But really it's a brain thing that Switches on that then start initiates all of this. So there have been many attempts in the the kind of health and wellness
space to take the hormones usually testosterone, estrogen and growth hormone being the three primary ones and then supply those to people in adulthood. Pmenopausal women taking estrogen and or testosterone nowadays quite frequent this happens a lot. Uh men taking testosterone either because they need to Quote unquote replace it or they're just trying to augment what they already have. growth hormone. Certainly all of these things dosed appropriately we know will increase vitality, energy, libido, recovery from exercise in some cases maybe cognition etc. But it's also been demonstrated that when you increase growth hormone and IGF-1 that
you decrease lifespan. This is seen in large dogs versus small dogs. The reason larger dogs live so much shorter Lives than small dogs >> is because of the dosing of IGF-1. So, how do you look at the balance between vitality and longevity? And are there factors that can increase both vitality and longevity? Because to my knowledge, the things that these hormones mainly that increase vitality, >> well, if they allow you to exercise more and perhaps be leaner, then perhaps they buy you some time, additional time in life, >> but they also decrease the amount of
time you have alive. So, it's a very interesting interplay and most people um conflate longevity and vitality. >> That's an an excellent question and you know short answer is we don't know. We don't really know and in the aging field this is called antagonistic pleotrophy. So something that is good when you're young can be bad when you're old, right? It it relates to this to this concept. And humans are of course you know They're sort of exempt from evolution uh if you will right so our natural lifespan is probably around 30 to 40 if you
look back in history that's how long people lived I mean there were always individuals who had >> you know exceptional lifespan but most people would die much earlier and >> infections um and it was probably mostly infectious diseases Um, but you know, you could Could argue from an evolutionary perspective, once you're sexually mature, you reproduced, and you guaranteed your offspring, which is around 30 to 40 years, >> nature doesn't care about you anymore. And so, there's no longer, it's very brutal to hear, but >> as long as your kids are are sufficient enough to raise,
an infant can't raise itself. >> That's right. a seven-year-old maybe Could if they were very industrious, you know, but but kids need us at least until they're in their late teens, >> right? >> And then, you know, you you may have some evolutionary pressure to maintain individuals who have knowledge and wisdom to help the, you know, the the group to survive. >> But that's probably a much weaker um force of evolution to keep you alive, right? And so that's why people Increasingly see now that there these inflection points that you know menopause but also in
men around age 30 to 40 dramatic changes in the composition again of the blood. We just looked at this mentioned earlier. If you look at the composition of the blood across human lifespan from 20 to 90 we call these waves of aging. The first wave is around 35 years of age. dramatic changes in concentrations of lots of factors and not just in women in men as Well. 35. It's a degra degradation, any improvement. >> Some go up, some go down. And you know, it's it's speculative, but does that have something to do with this is
how long nature needs us and then it doesn't care. And you know the the fact that we live now 80 or even longer on average, right, is really thanks to hygiene and you know um certain medications that you know blood pressure and and heart disease that we have. I have a friend Who's called me over the weekend. He's got some >> antibiotics. Brutal infection that that >> could almost took out his vision in one eye. Antibiotics infused. Boom. Done. And I know some listeners don't like antibiotics and they're concerned about it. I'll tell you, if
you have a brutal infection that's aggressive and it's near your brain or your eye and you get on systemic antibiotics and they're the Right one, >> you are one lucky individual. And if you don't, you're you could be looking at excavating one or both eyes. It's brutal. Yeah. Yeah. Wonderful. >> Many different infections. Antibiotics are, you know, a lifesaver. >> Absolutely. Yeah. So, um, it's a really good point and actually my my my friend Tom Rando uh mentioned earlier he always makes that point that, you know, a lot of the study look at lifespan as
an Outcome in animal models, but they don't really look at how active or, you know, what what is sort of the the level of that extended lifespan is are they just hanging in there these organisms or are they still strong and and and vital? right? Is the vitality still there? And and I think we don't we haven't found a magic that would keep everything together for a longer period of time and certainly not in humans. If you're a regular listener of the Huberman Lab Podcast, you've no doubt heard me talk about the vitamin mineral probiotic
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um somewhat surprised, although not entirely, by some of the Data on um sunlight exposure and lifespan. There's this really interesting large-scale study out of Sweden where people the more sunlight exposure people got, the longer they live. Even smokers who get more sunlight appear to on average these are averages folks seem to so overlapping distributions but live longer than um non-smokers who don't get sufficient sunlight. Now getting a lot of sunlight is also correlated with >> outdoor activity, fresh air, a number of things. So it's it's far from perfect >> study but um >> yeah the
interplay between vitality and I think of sunlight as provitality um and >> longevity is such an interesting one because the dance that we seem to be playing now with medications and >> could be supplements but really medication and lifestyle is what can we do and take to get more life but also to Enjoy that life more. And there are certain things like growth hormone which will make people feel much more youthful, much more youthful, skin, hair, even cognition etc. Ability to maintain or put on muscle, lose fat and on and on. But >> higher IGF-1
and growth hormone, broadly speaking, means a shorter life. >> Yeah. Maybe comes at a price. Yeah. >> Yeah. >> So I guess um I mean that can be Determined individually whether or not somebody wants to make that tradeoff. But what I'm excited about are the things that are possibly in these uh blood transfusions that come from younger humans, maybe us, but younger humans, you said pulled um that are getting to cellular function in a different way that are restoring vitality and longevity. And maybe there are a few candidates that you could discuss with us and
what pathways they Impinge on. I probably won't be familiar with the specific molecules, but are they impacting DNA, the the epiggenome, are they impacting mitochondrial function? If you would maybe pick your two or three favorite candidates, if you if you can, I know some of these are still under study. >> The factors often are growth factors. Um, GDF11 is is one of them that has been described. Growth and differentiation factor. There is you Know IGF-1 actually also has been described to be in young blood is is higher. There are factors that have been identified through
an approach that is similar to transferring young versus old. So what one of my trainees did, Saul Va when he was a graduate student in my lab, he did these parabiosis experiments and then his lab and my lab independently um did an experiment where we exercised mice, young mice, we took their blood And we injected it in nonex exercise mice and we could show that the beneficial effects of exercise on the brain were transmitted again by blood. >> Were you going young to young? So we went young to young. Saul went young to old and
could show that he can has a stronger effect on uh on these brains than just uh young blood. If it's exercise young blood, it's even better. >> So surprising to me because um I think of exercise as a purposeful stress >> that induces inflammatory molecules that then induce an adaptation. Are there factors that are liberated during exercise, brain derived neutrophic factor, etc. that are that are prohealth and vitality that are not designed to get a an adaptation >> that are just good stuff coming out of the cells when we exercise? What both actually he and
my lab found is that somehow this exercise seemed to trigger the release of factors from the liver That then go to the brain and make the brain function better. In our case, we described the protein that's called clusterin. >> It's has many different roles. It can bind to lipids. It's also called apoloprotein J. It's involved in coagulation and complement pathway. very complicated. We couldn't quite figure out how does it have these uh effects but we could show that if we rec if we make re combinant synthetic uh clusterin And injected into mice we could mimic
some of the effects. >> This is clusterin. >> Yeah, >> it's in the compliment pathway. uh compliment um initially identified as part of the immune system uh coat cells as a part of the eat me signal uh in the immune system system or the eat me system um but does many other things too right involved in synapse formation and remodeling and we know from Beth Stevens Work and others um wild >> wild yeah >> wild >> and then uh Saul found another factor that's called GLDH um that again uh he can clearly show has an
effect um But how exactly does that is is not clear. Most recently he does did another really creative experiment where he um did caloric restriction of mice and again that's sort of a an accepted you know beneficial effect and longevity Promoting potentially um and takes the plasma from mice puts it into other mice and again can isolate factors that mimic this effect >> because of of intermittent fasting. >> Yeah. What this tells us is that this is physiology, right? We call this physiology, but organs in our body communicate with each other and there's an orchestration
of effects that leads to factors that are released into the blood and then they go To different organs and have in this case beneficial effects. So the exercise effect is not just because you think you're exercising, but they're actually factors released that seem to benefit your brain. So interesting. There's this idea that was at least to me first put forth in a book called Spark. Do you know John Ry's book? It's some it's you know came out some years ago. He's a a physician I believe trained at Harvard Med. um and he talked about the
Essential requirements for movement and brain plasticity. This was early days of understanding neuroplasticity but uh he talked about brain derived neutrophic factor other things are liberated by by exercise but he described some interesting experiments in there of for instance there's a a um a sea dwelling creature that swims around and has a fairly elaborate nervous system at least for it but then at some point in its life settles down on a rock and eats its Own nervous system um basically >> and there's been some interesting experiments looking at what happens when you get that organism
or other organisms I believe I think it was that organism but other organisms to continue moving it seems like there's feedback from the process of moving the musculature and it could be neur neuromuscular in origin it could be hormonal in origin I I don't think we know that it comes from muscle but there's something about the Requirement for movement that signals to the brain that it needs to continue to exist and not just the motor portions of the brain and that it or the portions of the brain controlling motor activity, but that the body may
supply chemical or other types of feedback to the brain that if if it's moving and continues to move that the brain needs to continue to be robust, >> which I find very interesting because few things to me explain how movement of The body would signal vitality of the brain aside from hormone factors. But it kind of makes sense, right? Continuing to move the body is essential for keeping the brain healthy. >> Yeah. And I mean exercise interventions, you know, there's thousands of studies that show that exercise is beneficial cardiovascular, but also other exercise. >> Yeah.
Now it seems everyone's excited about resistance training. I mean, I think both is is clearly the answer. I Mean, you're you look good. What what's uh I mean, you're you're not in your 80s, but um do >> I might be >> Do you exercise? Right. Right. Yeah, that would be impressive. Um, what what is your exercise regimen? People will want to know. >> Yeah, I I I run. I like running outdoors. I like the sun. [laughter] >> Um, I I try to get two runs, 5 to 10k per week. >> Yeah, that's the main exercise
I do. I do some Pilates in the morning. >> I'm struck by how quickly the body degrades after an injury, especially if that injury occurs after age 60. When we are injured as kids, we heal up >> like it's amazing, right? I mean, kids getting cuts and then just like what happened? It just they heal right up. >> Do we know why we heal more quickly as kids than as adults? >> We do know that the immune system ages Like everything and it has this bias that it goes from a more specific response to a
non-specific response and that is often associated with inflammation. So, it's it's possible that um part of it is that if you have a wound, there's too much of an inflammatory response and less of a healing response. >> But we also s know from from aging organisms that if you have a cut, there is more of um Um there's proteins in the extracellular matrix like collagens and things like that that are often overproduced. and they may interfere with a quick healing response. So I think everything is a little bit out of tune and that might be
the reason uh but it's not really something I would know the details. I've always been fascinated by the fact that if we get a cut on the surface of our body um that it may or may not heal with a scar, but if we get a cut on the Inside of our mouth, >> which is loaded with bacteria and >> warm and moist and in contact with the outside world all day long, it tends to heal >> with either zero or much less of a scar. >> There has to be something in the mouth. >>
Fascinating. healing and I believe people are studying this but someone's got to figure this out >> and it could be saliva >> wild right I mean the the rate of Healing I know there's a lot of blood supply >> but there's also a lot of blood supply to the nose and and to the hands and there's scars form on the hands and on the nose >> yeah there's also scarring in babies right may not leave or a cut in a baby may not leave any uh trace but the same type of of wound in an
older person may may leave a um a scar for the rest of their life. Yeah. >> So, how do we move past correlation and to really understand um causitive stuff? So, we'll get back to lifestyle factors, but I mean it's so very clear from the animal studies and from the human studies that you described that there's something in young blood or things in young blood >> that are pro-rejuvenation for the brain and other tissues. How do we get to a a real prolongevity molecule medication Treatment >> or prohealth maybe more right? I think most people
in the field are not really interested in extending lifespan which would be longevity but health span. So, >> and we talked about this before, right? That you try to maintain the function of your organs until you die. So that your brain would still be functioning your cognitively intact. All your organs would still be functioned relatively well and then you know you fall asleep And and that's the end of your life. Um and not necessarily extending lifespan as you said. It could be that we extend lifespan and you just have 10 more miserable years. That's certainly
nobody would want that, right? But I think to get to causation, we need these types of experiments, physiological experiments in animal models first to isolate individual factors and then test them on an individual basis with very rigorous methods which we can do and say okay This factor has the capacity to maintain for example brain function in the mouse. And then we have to test it in humans and do it in a in a careful clinically uh controlled trial where people are blinded whether they got the treatment or not and do a big enough study that
we can say okay this truly works and then we have a drug. >> How close are we to the clinical trial? >> There are different molecules. Colossal is actually another one. It's this um Protein that um has been described to have beneficial effects on multiple different organs. The biology again not exactly clear but >> K L O T H O clone >> that's right. Yeah. Yeah. >> Um and you know there's there's companies trying to move this into humans into human trials. um some of these other factors I think their their companies are trying uh
or Inhibiting detrimental factors and with with you know individual clinical trials you could get there um in the next 5 10 years there may be something that has an effect I think we will not have a [snorts] factor an individual factor that just has you know this miracle effect on everything this is very clear from the studies of young blood. It's many different factors and they target different pathways, different cell types in different Tissues. So you really need to you may have to decide, you know, for this organ we need this treatment, for this organ
we need that treatment to optimize its function and keep it, you know, running at full capacity until you're 100 years old. I'm not suggesting anyone do this, but I I do seem to hear now and again that people are taking cloth already. Um not surprising. People will, you know, get ahead of the curve, so to speak. >> Yeah, I've also read people taking this GDF11. Um I don't know where to get it. >> I'm guessing it's just Mexico and um Central and South America. There there are a lot of clinics that do this sort of
thing. I I will put out a a true story. Um cautionary note a friend who when whenever people say I have a friend it's you know but this is a medical doctor um who had a back pain that was uh giving him a lot of issues and he went to a stem cell clinic in Mexico got an injection of stem cells into a spinal Disc which my neurosurgeon friends tell me is a terrible idea. Turns out the disc cannot accept cellular injections. a neuros a ch a chair of neurosurgery told me that. So >> you
can come at me if you want folks, but he's the chair of neurosurgery at a prominent medical school. So that the disc cannot accept direct injections of foreign cells. Anyway, this guy went a different guy, different MD went uh and got this injection and ended up with a Um an egg-sized infection that left him paralyzed. He was fortunate enough to be uh airlifted to a certain clinic and uh in the United States and uh told he was that's it. You're done. We're going to have to just sever your spinal cord. Uh he was uh taken
to another clinic where fortunately they were able to excise this um this infection and he's mobile today. He will tell you and I'll tell you that you have to be very very Careful getting injections of cells in anywhere but the regulations out of country often are are not as stringent and I tell that story because a number of people are excited about stem cells they're excited about these technologies but it it really can be quite dangerous >> and again this you know is what we discussed earlier the this you know experience that we have in
the medical field that you really need to test something in people in a very Controlled fashion very carefully with the dose and and and then test it in a blinded fashion ideally so that you know it really works and it's safe and what you mentioned earlier with stem cells there are no such treatments that have been tested rigorously >> and for many of these other factors they work in some animal models there are some mouse studies that showed they might have an effect. But you cannot translate that to humans. It's just a Long road >>
and I would be extremely cautious to take anything that is not really prescribed to you from a from a clinician that you trust. >> Thank you. Uh by way of contrast, um plateletri plasma PRP is approved by the FDA. People who are undergoing fertility treatments will get injected into their ovary. People are getting PRP injected into their shoulders, their knees, their whatever. Uh I'm not trying to be Disparaging of this. It is FDA approved. To my knowledge, plateletri plasma does not contain stem cells. >> That's correct. >> But it seems to be beneficial enough and
safe enough that the FDA has approved it. Uh what is the deal with plateletri plasma? What has it been shown to be actually useful for? Because just because something is allowed for one indication and is used broadly for a bunch of things doesn't mean that There's evidence that it works for all those things. >> That's right. That's right. So plateletri plasma has these platelets in there that are full of growth factors. They have these granules that help in wound healing is a primary function. And um somehow that seems to be beneficial in sports injuries. it's
often given and as far as I know I think it's from your own blood you you you concentrate these platelets and then they release these Factors so you may have a massive load of growth factors that help you heal these various tissues that you mentioned yeah I haven't tried it but I know people who have and and reported some positive effect I've heard also a lot about exoomes and [snorts] there are some clinics I believe where I think exoomes are FDA approved as a treatment What are exoomes and what what have they been shown to
be useful for in studies andor clinical? >> I don't know in clinical studies how they're used, but um so cells can release sort of little packages of material that is filled with proteins, but there's also RNA molecules in there, lipids, metabolites. And some cells do this all the time. cancer cells for example do it. But also some immune cells have a very active release of these little um sort of like little packages, vesicles we call them, that are filled With um again all these different molecules in the [snorts] blood. You find large numbers of these
exosomes and that's where they're usually purified from. Different cells have different cargo in these in these vesicles and it seems that they function to some extent to deliver information from one cell to another. It's still a very new field but people explore you know whether they can be used for for treatment purposes but also for diagnostic purposes. Do they Tell you something about a specific organ or a tumor that is developing? So when we measure these proteins that we talked about earlier in the blood um we actually measure what's in the exosomes also. So these
exosomes they float basically like immune cells they float in the blood and uh we open them up and we measure what's inside. >> We should probably talk about some of the things that damage vitality and longevity. Accident and injury aside, we know that smoking, especially nicotine, um damages DNA, uh increases inflammation and will shorten your life. I don't think there's any debate about that, right? >> But what about some of the other things that might produce low-level DNA damage? In particular, these days, I'm very interested in EMFs. I I don't actually believe that the low
levels of EMFs that are present in most technologies are damaging in the acute uh way that you Know being near them is going to harm you. But there is the idea that things can be cumulative, right? I mean I get one X-ray every few years when I go to the dentist, but there's a reason the clinic the the technician runs behind uh the wall. Uh he or she doesn't want to be exposed to that on a daily basis. So how do we feel about things that at a low dose don't damage DNA um or mutate
proteins either but that if we are exposed to them over a lot of Time could very well do that. What are your thoughts on this? >> A very difficult question. I mean you could ask the same question about any chemical that we invent and we put into food or we get exposed to right the you know the plastic we you know we drink out of cups hot stuff out of a cup that is coated with plastic and you know we're full of plastic. How is that going to change our lifespan? It hasn't in a in
a measurable way so far, right? But We don't know what's going to happen in 20 30 years or if people you know synthesize a compound that is detrimental that it doesn't look detrimental. It has been tested and is safe but as you said if it accumulates maybe or in combination with other stuff it may be detrimental. >> I think about this from time to time and and I wonder about what's in my environment that I can easily control. I try not to drink out of plastic. Um, uh, You know, I try and drink out of
cans that don't have BPAs and things like that if I can. >> Yeah, if you if you go down that route, you know, it drives you crazy and you could, you know, sort of not do anything anymore or not eat anything. >> Well, it's getting harder nowadays to to live a clean life. I mean, how long were you in Switzerland before you came to the States? >> I was 26. Yeah. >> You were weaned in a very clean environment. very you know uh that's not just a a uh stereotype about about the Swiss being things
are yes very tidy and clean the streets are remarkably clean you could drink out of the lake in Zurich right >> maybe not the lake but you know most most there's still fountains with ground water where you can drink in any village basically yeah if you're lucky enough to grow up in a place where the tap water Is clean >> the food tends to be pretty devoid of dyes and preservatives Um, and your home is centered around eating mostly whole foods, >> foods that you cook, fresh fruits and vegetables and freshly prepared, right? Even desserts
that are fresh that are prepared, right? As opposed to a lot of packaged foods. >> It seems that that that's a far and away different experience than most certainly Americans get nowadays, >> right? And you wonder what the effect of that is going to be. We simply don't know. >> Yeah, we don't know. And I know now there's a big, you know, kind of attack on food dyes as the thing and there no there's no smoking gun data on any of those. But yeah, I think the cumulative effects of things are are worth considering. I
think for most people, >> I try not to think too much about it, But I also I mean growing up in an environment where, you know, we had a big vegetable garden. I have a vegetable garden, you know, I have lots of fruit trees and >> try to get, you know, stuff out of my own garden. That's a luxury, of course, for a lot of people. Um, but as you said, you can, you know, you can also buy uh fresh fruit. It's more work, right? It's more work than just buying a readymade food, but you
know what you're Cooking and what's in there. >> I'm fascinated these days by the um the data on organic versus non-organic fruits and vegetables. I I spend the extra money on organic, but the more I look into it, the more you find that the differences aren't that great. Now taste can be different and ideally you're sourcing from local farms but I have a a friend um actually I'll just he he'll be okay with me saying this. We had uh he's a physician Dr. Teaos Solommani. He's a Dermologist um whose son ran an experiment for his
uh school project uh looking at uh the differences between organic and non-organic fruits and vegetables in terms of what contaminants and and things uh are on them, pesticides, etc. and found this is one kids study but um uh essentially no significant differences in that particular set uh set of batches of fruits and vegetables and so that is I would say reassuring on the one hand because it means that people who can't afford organic will um probably be doing about as well as people who can but I think if you can grow your own or or
access from local farms I mean surely it's cleaner I mean the highest rates of endocrine disruptors are found in rural areas. I always thought that being in a big city was the most dangerous for your lungs and endocrine health. And we had Sha uh Shauna Swan on the podcast. Serious researcher in this area and she said, "No, I mean if you live in an area where they're um spraying crops, >> cancer risk, endocrine disruption. It's very serious." >> Also association with Parkinson's disease and Yeah. >> Right. [clears throat] >> I'd like to take a quick
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wait list of over 250,000 people, but they're offering early access to Hubberman Podcast listeners. Again, that's functionhealth.com/huberman to get early access to Function. Well, as long as we're talking about food, we should talk about not eating. We should talk about fasting. So many studies now showing in worms, in mice, in monkeys, and perhaps even in humans that subcaloric intake or inter uh for long periods of time or perhaps intermittent fasting, we can talk about how we define that um can extend life. How is that thought to work? Is it the reduction in this mTor malian
target? Is it um reduction inflammation? Is it clearing of senocence cells? Give us the the overview and and any specifics about intermittent fasting and and perhaps start by saying how you define intermittent fasting. Is it daily or is it 2 three days? >> I think just to answer that there is no definition. >> Okay. >> There is no definition and the whole field is also MS. Um you know it's again taking studies in mice for example um and then translating them to humans you know that the lifespan the their whole rhythm um their environment is
so different from our environment right that to translate these um is is always a stretch and there's no clinical studies that show a clear benefit of of fasting in humans and some studies in monkeys actually suggest that it's Detrimental um for monkeys to fast for example they had more um uh I think worse kidney function and things like that um so overall in from animal studies it's very clear that you activate sort of beneficial pathways they're very diverse um again we can now use unbiased um assessment of any different cell types in an organism at
you know gene expression across thousands of genes and we see that different cells respond in Different ways and you get functional improvements but they're very broad. They're in part reduced inflammation. Um other cells um you get benefits on their energy metabolism, protein turnover, how they handle sort of what we call the garbage that accumulates in cells. um overall from these animal studies clearly benefits from reducing calorie intake. Uh also less what we call oxidative damage. So it's like you you burn a fire, right? And if if that fire Is really intense, you may cause more
damage. But how you translate this really to tangible benefits in humans, I'm not sure. >> Do you practice intermittent fasting? rarely >> you like breakfast. >> I I tried um you know Longo's uh diet uh a few times where I reduce you reduce calorie. Walter Longo, >> I'm familiar with him. What's what's the the contour of the diet? >> So it's mostly you switch to a ketogenic diet. So a fatrich diet. So your metabolism changes basically from a regular sort of glucosriven diet to burning fat. Um, and you feel that when you start to starve
that somehow it's almost like your body changes a little bit in um you you get a bit more alert almost. And in a way that makes sense, right? If you think you're out there in a wild in the wild, whether you're an animal or a human being, >> if you don't have enough food, the last thing you want is that your brain doesn't work well, >> right? I imagine the catakolamines, dopamine or epinephrine and epinephrine increase. >> Yeah. Yeah. >> So you get more alert, right? A little hangry. >> Yeah. Hangry. Exactly. Got it. >>
But um I'm not sure how long that lasts and how beneficial this is in the long Run. But yeah, I've done it a a few times. You know, you do one week, you you lower your calories, I think down to a thousand per day. So it's pretty pretty brutal, but only for 5 days and then we go back to normal. Yeah. I know of a few people who've done um long-term fasts, so three or four days with just water and electrolytes, maybe some ketones, and they were very overweight, carrying a lot of excess body fat,
and when they returned to eating, claimed That their appetite was forever changed, in particular, the types of foods they were hungry for. And um that's thought to be uh an effect on the gut microbiome, which then impacts the brain. So, there may be a place for those longer fasts. um uh what do they call the medically supervised fast? >> I generally just like caffeine, electrolytes, and water until about 10 or 11:00 a.m. Um and then I like to eat >> no later than no later than nowadays at 700 p.m. because I go to bed a
little earlier. So is that intermittent fasting or is that just um being a busy person >> who wants to still sleep well and exercise, you know? >> Yeah, it is sort of a fast, right? Uh I mean in English we call it a break fast. Um um and and it is like you know 12 hours maybe where you have no food and I think that that probably triggers some metabolic activity that is different than if you continue to eat. I think the Worst is probably for the body to eat all the time like a lot
of people snack the whole day. That's not how we were um how we evolved, right? That we evolved being starved on a regular basis. But is that a good thing or a bad thing? For sure, our body is used to it. That's that's >> that's a fair statement. It can handle it. I can't do the one meal per day thing because that meal ends up being so large that I get a lot of gastric Discomfort and then it disrupts my sleep. And that's what I'd like to discuss also is sleep. If there's been at least
one, there's probably been three in my mind, but at least one major triumph in the public health discussion over the last let's say 10 years. It's and we can really truly thank the great Matt Walker for this um who wrote Why We Sleep. You know, he was the first person to really say, "Hey, these are all the terrible Things that are going to happen to you if you don't sleep enough." And everyone needs different amounts. I'm fine on six hours, so I don't believe everyone needs eight. I I seven I'm great but I'm fine on
six, especially with a little nap here and there. But Matt got people scared. Then he got people thinking about how to improve their sleep. And I and others have spent time on this. I think that's one of the great victories of of public health communication around Um the best science. Uh the other would be the importance of exercise um both cardiovascular and resistance training. But during sleep, we know that there's this so-called glimpmphatic clearance. the the clearance of junk from uh all the tissues but in particular from the brain uh that's facilitated by the ga
hence glimp fatic um have you guys looked at lymph between young and old animals I'm fascinated by >> that would be very interesting to do >> because it's the debris from the blood right it's the well it's the debris from the extracellular space that doesn't get picked up by the blood I mean it's essentially the the >> extra bad stuff, all the ammonia and cellar debris and fragments. >> I would love for you guys to do an experiment looking at lymph from young and old. >> I mean, we looked at the cerebrospinal fluid, but it's
of course different. And That again differs dramatically with age. The composition changes dramatically. And I had a fellow who was heroic enough or crazy enough to collect um young CSF from from animals, from mice. kilo. >> Yeah. >> Wow. >> And then infuse it uh via a pump um over a month into old animals. And she could show that you can regenerate the brain um improve cognitive function in these Mice. And um oligodendritty, these cells that wrap the connections between neurons, it's like the they produce the the the plastic around the wire, right? If you
will. they were the the the strongest target if we looked in an unbiased way. Uh and so she's studying that now in her own lab. But it shows you in another way how a fluid changes from young to old and the young fluid somehow um has beneficial factors that benefit uh the old brain and so I Wouldn't be surprised that um there could be beneficial factor in the glimp or the the lymphatics that um might benefit an old organism. We thought about it but it's I think in mice it's extremely difficult. There's also the interstial
fluid itself that people have collected but they usually collected by infusing artificial spinal fluid and then um you you almost wash out what it's in there. people have used that in the neurotransmitter field and also more Recently to look at you know a beta or accumulation of of of protein deposits in the brain. >> Why not just go straight to humans? I mean I feel like random lab for a long time. I've worked on so many different species including humans but it seems like given the relatively equal expense of doing exploratory science in mice and
humans that unless there's a question you can only address in mice why not just take CSF from young and old humans And and >> oh yeah that's we have done yeah >> oh okay >> CSF is no problem yeah so we measure proteins in the CSF >> and again thousands of proteins and we ask are there proteins that correlate with cognitive function, with resilience or decline. What's really interesting is so we did this in a completely unbiased way. You find um proteins that go up and go down together with with uh cognition. So that positively
or negatively correlate and almost all the top proteins are synaptic proteins. We then use the top two, the one that goes up the most and goes down the most and made a ratio of the two. And that ratio is a very strong predictor uh for cognitive resilience or or decline. And what's scary is that ratio continues to change from early adulthood. So you get you get a continuous basically degradation of that signal and we get uh very prominent Um risk uh prediction between the top and the bottom quartile and this is based on 3,000 individuals
where we had CSF from and it's independent of pathological markers. So we also had people with Alzheimer's and um uh Alzheimer's disease in there at different stages of disease. So if you look for what is only predicted of cognitive function based on a memory test, we find these synaptic proteins are very strong predictors. Um so again suggesting that the composition change and then you can ask is this a reflection of the change or is it actually driving the change and it seems to be both. Again, >> it's always tough to get to causality, but uh
anytime I see a study that looks in a correlative way at, you know, like which athletes live the longest, it's very interesting, right? I mean, I have no desire to run a marathon. >> Um >> but if I knew that it was going to add 20 years to my life or 15 years, I might start becoming a marathoner, but a recent study showed that um it's the pole vters. Not going to get into that. and the gymnasts and I think the high jumpers and the sprinters. So the fast twitch muscle folks that they get a
substantial longevity effect you know 5 to eight years on average more than their you know age match cohorts even compared to other highly trained Athletes. So I see a result like that and then of course the the reductionist scientist in me says okay so is it the running is it the jumping is it >> but then you think like oh using the corey model I mean you can essentially look at the blood from sprinters versus marathoners and of course they're going to differ these are different people after all very different lifestyles in a number of
different ways but >> you have to kind of wonder again whether Or not the fe I wonder whether the feedback signals from the body there's such some feedback signals in the form of a chemical that says, "Okay, this body is moving fast, jumping, um, and doing explosive activity essentially on a regular basis that supplies the brain with a a cocktail of things presumably that keeps neurons healthy, keeps them um, you know, keeps the olodenderytes proliferating, >> right? Uh, that make sure that you know You got plenty of myelin to for those fast fast transmission signals.
Um, and to me that's where I like the field of health span and and lifespan, but especially health span really needs to go because otherwise it's just like pick the exercise you're going to do regularly. That's great. That's a great first step. But then ultimately it really does become about quality of life. And if so, the importance of doing these kinds Of studies to me is is immense because otherwise it's just sort of like well you do a little cardio, you do a little this, do a little that and um I don't know. I mean
that's like saying oh you can get the same level of social connection and from social media as you can can from inerson connect. It's two totally different landscapes. So I'm anyway I'm struck by the idea that exercise is not one thing >> and that there may be there are certain Forms of exercise that are much more potent which it means there probably molecules associated with certain forms of of exercise that are much more potent in terms of brain function. >> Yeah, that's very interesting. So John Long at at Stanford has a lab and he looked
uh at metabolites in the blood of um dogs, sprinter dogs, um horses that do races and then also human sprinters. >> And he found this um interesting modified uh amino acid uh that is Conjugated to lactate, lacy it's called. And that compound seems to spike uh with these extreme bursts of muscle activity. Um and he could then show in animals that it's actually beneficial and mediate some of the beneficial effects. He identified the receptor. So it's a really very exciting uh direction of research. But it it speaks to what you're saying, right, that there's different
ways, different forms of exercise, and they may have different Effects and they may all be beneficial, better than not doing anything, but they may have different effects and and you may be able to harness one or the other, and also some of us may benefit more from one or the other. It's extremely hard to do a rigorous clinical study on any of this, right? Because obviously if you exercise, you always know it. So you can't be blinded. And if you hate it or if you love it, your brain is probably going to send very different
signals, Right? I mean, I have friends who just hate exercise and they never want to do it. So how are you going to tell them, you know, you should do this or that? >> Uh well, if it buys you life anyway, I I'm fortunate that I've always loved exercise. I've always loved it. I feel great going into it. I feel great during and I feel after. I mean, sometimes it's painful, but I always enjoy it. But I realize that not everyone uh not everyone feels that way. >> Right. our our colleague uh Robert Seapolski told
me about a study where they have rodents run on a wheel regularly and um rodents love to run on wheels as you know and they um >> they of course experience reductions in blood pressure, blood lipids improve etc after the exercise right during the exercise and immediately after there's inflammation but you get the adaptation they improve but if you tether the running of that animal you like it's Sort of like your parabolic is experiment. If you tether the running of that animal to another animal that's trapped in a running wheel, it can't leave the running
wheel and it has to run when the other one runs. >> They're doing the same exercise and they're genetically identical animals >> and the one that's forced to run experiences long-term increases in blood pressure, stress, uh markers of stress and um and deficits in memory associated With hippocample not damage but rewiring. So you realize that the um the choice is big in all of this. >> That's for me running on a treadmill in a room versus outside. >> I'm exactly the same way. I mean not to spin off into every study but a lot of
Stanford citations here. Our colleague Joe Parvevesi >> uh neurosurgeon did this amazing experiment where he stimulates >> uh for other reasons he landed in the Anterior mids singulate cortex and when he stimulates there people feel as if >> there's some um impending pressure >> on them like they're driving into a storm and they feel motivated they feel the the subjectively tenacity and it turns out that the anterior singulate cortex grows in people who successfully diet who push through challenges in exercise and cognitive of things. So pushing oursel, you can tell your friends that if you
enjoy doing Something, you actually get less benefit. >> Yeah, maybe >> if you hate it, you get more benefit, but not if you're forced to do it. So choose electing to do things that you hate and doing them anyway. >> To overcome >> is where the real where you get the uh double benefit. >> Um so in any case, this is the brain structure associated with >> yourself to to do a marathon, right? And you go through the torture. >> That's right. And then I'll sprint instead. I now do this thing where I hop on
the Airdine bike, the one with the handles, and I'll go warm up a minute and I'll go hard for 20, 30 seconds, and then rest 10 seconds and just repeat. And it's over in like seven minutes. But it's amazing where the brain goes. You're like, I hate this. I want to get off this thing. But afterwards, it feels Pretty great. Well, I would love for you guys to look at CSF or other factors in, let's just call it highintensity versus long endurance type exercise. It's it's also hard to do in animals. So, but you can
do it very easily in humans. I I I'm trying to think about the ways that we can use lifestyle interventions until you come up with the the the magic pill. >> Yeah. And you know, it's interesting that you say that. Um Jill Livingston and others um you know, they they have Studied um sort of how lifestyle influences the development of dementia and Alzheimer's disease. And it's a dramatic component that you can influence um easier or not, right? I mean some of them are very hard to get out of but you know poverty is a risk
of course um childhood obesity uh lower education um smoking excessive alcohol use um many of these things that we know you know they're good or bad if you have all These if you optimize everything your risk for dementia is much lower I mean there's now you know countless studies that that show that. So there there are things that you can do, the lifestyle factors, right? Um and they're easier to do for some people than for others, but it's clear that um there's incredible power in um lifestyle and and what we do. Are you aware of
any correlates to the exercise thing we were just talking About whereby certain um cognitive exercises can uh help us hold on to cognition? For instance, we've heard doing crossword puzzles or, you know, reading good books. I mean, I think this is becoming increasingly important because it's so easy to have one's time sucked away on the internet or on social media um nowadays, which requires essentially no work, right? You just scroll and read. I mean, I mean, articles have become very brief. Is There any known benefit of trying to tackle cognitive uh gymnastics? Is there any
data? >> Not to my knowledge. Unfortunately, you know, the the studies that looked um in patients who already have cognitive impairment and u you try to give them sort of uh exercise and mental exercise, they don't do much unfortunately. >> It's probably more complex. And you of course also have again, you know, what We discussed earlier with exercise, right? Some people just love to be stimulated and you know they want to learn something new, you know, want to learn a new language or a new instrument and their mind is already attuned to that, right? They
they crave for this and for others um that might be much harder and and and and they may not benefit from it. Um but you're the neuroscientist, you know, what what I mean you know what what could you get Out of of something like that? And if if somebody is is really um excited about, you know, doing any of these mental exercises versus, you know, it doesn't speak to them. >> Yeah. I think that if we should all find the things that we want to do enough that we would elect to do them, but that
are challenging. There are data coming out now showing that handwriting is very important to development of certain brain circuits. It's kind of a no Surprise, but this is important for the younger generation who's no longer handwriting so much. The phrase use it or lose it makes perfect sense to me. I mean, if you don't walk enough or run enough or cycle enough or do anything with your legs, eventually the the neural systems that control your legs will atrophy as will the muscles. We tend to think about the muscles, but we don't think about the neural
control over the muscles. So, I think as since I'm 50 now, I think, you know, I make it a point to read at least, it's going to sound so poulry, but at least one page and ideally one chapter of a book every day. Sometimes it's just one page, but just with a book with my phone out of the room, and I do, and I read papers and things like that, but doing things that feel unnatural, um, but that I know I will benefit from when they're over, there's such a deep feeling of satisfaction from having
done That sort of thing. And for me, the the higher intensity cardio is that I' I'd much rather jog than sprint. So, I'd make it a point to sprint, you know? So, I think maybe we should think about exercise and cognitive stuff the same way. Who knows? Yeah. I mean, is there anything in Switzerland that they do that they don't do here in terms of food and exercise and lifestyle? Because the Swiss are very healthy. The Swiss also, as I recall from something in The Economist a few years ago when I used to I no
longer subscribe to them, but the highest caffeine intake in the world is the Swiss. >> Really? >> They drink so much. >> Also, chocolate. >> Yeah. Yeah. Good. >> Chocolate and cheese. Um, and people eat a lot of it. I eat almost every day. I eat chocolate. Yeah. >> You're making some people very happy. I Eat 100%. >> It's part of my diet. >> When When do you eat it? >> Usually after, you know, with a coffee, after lunch or so. High in polyphenols. >> Mhm. Yeah. And tastes delicious. >> And tasty. Yeah. Stimulates your
brain. Makes you happy. >> I eat the raw or roasted cacao beans. >> Yeah. >> Cuz I like bitter bitter things. >> Yeah. Those are good, too. >> Yeah. Those are a good a good a good punch. You own a winery. >> That's right. >> That runs counter to everything I understand about longevity, but it runs. >> Okay. All right. Here we go. Educate me. Alcohol itself is probably not good for our body, right? Just pure alcohol, right? But a lot of drinks are part of a social environment. And and I think one of the
major benefits that people have attributed to, you know, wine um is the Social aspects of it. I mean some people may drink a bottle of wine by themselves but I think the majority you know they have a meal together and you share a bottle of wine and that's we talked about this earlier you know how you dissociate one thing from another. I think um you know this is complexity that you you see actually in almost all studies that look at centinarians you know where people live the longest. Um one of the most common aspects is
that They're all very social. They're not left alone when they're old. They have a community and they they meet other people. Right. And so I think that's part of the the wine culture is really um being social, being together. Yeah. >> Yeah. I mean, the data on social connection and stress reduction, huge. Yeah, I've gone on record saying that the data say zero alcohol better than any. Two drinks per week is probably the upper limit for a non-alcoholic adult. Um, after which I just say, you know, make sure you're doing other things correctly. One thing
that I I want to be really um clear on is since I'm talking to um someone from originally from Switzerland, although you're a US citizen now, um is that the United States has never had a history of healthy food or drinking habits. You know, if you think about classic American cuisine, it's all unhealthy stuff. apple pie, French fries, Hamburgers, hot dogs, pizza, which was not originally not ours, right? And and on and on, right? That there's been a a culture of volume and abundance um and kind of amusement park food, frankly. And the same is
true for drinking. I mean certainly not speaking for everybody but there's been a culture around alcohol in the United States of drinking a lot of beer or a lot of spirits whereas I think in Europe um the Food including the desserts have a have a tradition of nourishment of social connection and sure we have bars in the United States and people drink beer while they watch games and things like that but I think sometimes that gets lost in the conversation um that the United States has never been a particularly healthy place except be for its
level of of engagement in sports and exercise until recently. So, I I totally agree with what you're saying. If you're getting together with friends and having a couple drinks or something like that, that that sounds entirely healthy, but um the problem is that's usually not how it looks >> on uh certainly not on college campuses, but that's another thing. >> Well, excess is right anything if you also with food. I mean, I eat any food. You can eat any food, but you don't want to just eat one food. I mean, I eat French fries or
burger. There's nothing Wrong with it. But if that's your only diet, that's not good. >> Uh if you eat no fruit, that's probably not good. If you have no vegetables in your diet >> and the same, I think with drinks. I mean, I have drinks, but I try not to to get drunk every day, right? Um, so I think moderation is really u I think the the magic. I'm going to get a little uh wacky here. Not woo wacky. There's some really interesting stories about improving health and vitality maybe lifespan things that adjust blood flow.
So for instance in the literature around chiong breathing and there's a lot of different forms of this but we we can we can distill things down to the fact that inhales vigorous inhales increase the heart rate. >> Um exhales deliberate exhales extended exhales decrease the heart rate through Something called respiratory sinus arrhythmia. So in a number of cultures they'll do um chiong tai chi which is deliberate breathing and movement of course and the idea is that you're improving circulation that it feeds the brain you know in the language of these things that it's feeding the
brain nutrients and it all makes perfect sense given given what you're saying. It's also interesting. I I've been looking at um how patterns of breathing change as People age and talking to people who work in hospitals and with and there's some actually a little bit of data around this. >> As people get older and their cognitive function goes, they tend to become mouth breathers. [gasps and panting] >> That's interesting. >> They're having trouble oxygenating their brain. Now, it could be the mouth breathing is the cause or it could be reflective of of something else. kind
of Interesting to think about because the relationship between breathing and blood flow is is a is an obvious and wellestablished one. So there are all these things about the young blood versus old blood that might be independent of pure biochemistry of aging that could be controlled with >> lifestyle factors and we say exercise improves >> uh health span but exercise increases breathing rate. So, have you um are you At all interested in I'm trying to get a bunch of studies going here. You can tell in people that do some sort of deliberate deep breathing. It
doesn't have to be Tai Chi. >> Would be super interesting, right? Yeah. >> Because you're changing the chemistry of >> I mean anything. You know what we discussed earlier is this cause and effect. And the the really the way to show that something has an effect is you have a study where some people you take Their blood, they do an exercise and then you take their blood again and you look does it change something very easy to do. >> Can we do this experiment? >> Absolutely. >> Cuz I ran a a study with David money
we can get. Money we can get that um I'm not worried about that. David Spiegel and I ran a study on breath work and but we didn't look at how different patterns of breathing change a blood chemistry. >> Yeah, that would be super interesting. >> Absolutely. >> Because these are things that people can do at any age. >> Absolutely. Yeah. >> And they're zero cost but we don't have mechanistic data. We just have oh you know people who do chiong or tai chi live live a long time but then there's so many variables. They're outdoors.
They're moving. It's social. And so the thing that concerns me about the health Span, longevity space, if you will, is that we keep going around the merrygoround and we keep going exercise, sleep, nutrition, social connection, sunlight, and don't smoke, drink in excess, play a contact sport where you hit your we just keep going around and around >> and we need tools, >> right? So I I think that's exactly what we recognized at at Vero um where we we want to have tailored interventions that You know you give very specific advice based on you know if
your heart is showing accelerated aging. This is the exact exercise that will help you based on studies that we just discussed, right? Where you say, okay, here we had 50 people who did this exercise and 50 who didn't or something different and it had a clear benefit and made their heart younger or made their brain younger. That's really what the I think we all want, right? Rather than these broad Sort of, oh, live a healthy life, >> how's that going to help you? You want really tailored um advice and then also validating that it actually
does something. >> And this is not a promotional. I just learned about Vero uh today really. I'd heard of it but I'm I'm learning in detail. So it's it's now a company that anyone can access these tools. >> We are live. Um uh it's currently um a small number of clinics that we're Working with and we hope to you know grow and expand it quickly. >> Do you measure your steps or make it a point to walk a lot each day or both? >> I measure my steps. I have a Garmin. I find it useful.
I find also the sleep measurements really useful. Talk about sleep earlier. Um you know it tells me how well I slept, how much deep sleep. Yeah, I think that's useful. >> Yeah, it's wild. Nowadays, people just accept, oh yeah, we track our sleep, Etc. I remember when I was a posttock at Stanford in 2005 to 2010, people getting into quote unquote wearables is what they call in um >> that didn't quite work. >> Yeah. There was one graduate student in the neuroscience program, this this woman Rachel, who I think went to go work for a
wearable company, and she had like seven or eight different >> This is like Mike Snider. We had him on here. Yeah. and way ahead Of the curve with all these wearables. And I remember thinking, "Who's gonna wear all those watches?" And she said, "No, no, eventually it will all be condensed to one watch or maybe even just a small ring or device." And I thought there's all right, whatever. I've always been into health and wellness, but I think and sure enough, she was right, but far smarter than me. I [snorts] think we're going there. >>
I think we're going to a place where Soon many many things will be measured. Um, like I would love eyeglasses where the um uh frames have a uh measure the the amount of photons I get during the day to make sure I get sufficient sunlight. >> Yeah, that's always something that I don't understand. There's a lot of people in this country have shades, right? They they wear dark glasses all day long. This is so bad for your brain >> and for your mental health. We know 80,000 plus subjects in this in this UK study. The
brighter your days, >> ideally from sunlight, but the brighter your days and the darker your nights, the less susceptible you are to every single mental health condition. And if you have a mental health condition, it gets way better. So you need bright days and dark nights. And artificial lights during the day are not sufficient. And at night, a small amount of artificial light is too much. So these things Should be straightforward to measure. >> Aren't people in the south happier? You know, in Europe, if you look sort of, they enjoy life more. They have more
food. They sit together. They have fun. And the more north you go, the more this more serious and the more depression you >> I have Danish relatives. I don't want to insult them, but um and they're and they're very cheerful. Um but it's interesting. People vary a great deal in their susceptibility to artificial light At night. So, I've long said you need to dim the light. Some people should even wear short wavelength blocking glasses, you know, maybe even red light. Some people a small amount of artificial light at night increases their cortisol really substantially and
can disrupt their sleep. Other people less so. So there seems to be some divergence and it doesn't correlate with uh with light eyes or dark eyes. I am very very sensitive to light at night. It will Really disrupt my sleep. Some people not so much. But in terms of temperament, I'm going to inspire some family arguments here. But um I don't know. >> Yeah. Yeah. It's I mean even growing up in Switzerland, you know, we had for the very short days in the winter and then often fog um it it's hard to get up in
the morning. Um and then coming to California, it's sunny all day. Um you know, most of the year, it just makes it easier to to get your day started. And And yeah, I I love the sun. Yeah, I think if people don't have access to sunlight, enough sunlight, there are great data that a 10,000 lux artificial light placed in the kitchen or in the bathroom when you wake up in the morning, you don't need a lot of time in front of it. You don't have to stare at it. That can help offset some seasonal effect
uh depression. And some people just need more photons to get that morning spike in cortisol, which is good To get the catakolamines going to dopamine and so on. I mean, the power of light over our mood and metabolism is is huge. >> Amazing. Yeah, should do another study on that. >> I mean, listen, I I I'm due for a sbatical. Can I do a sbatical in your lab? Tell me, is there anything that you're particularly excited about that I did not ask you about? What you've been publishing so well for so long now? And You
really put this whole field of looking at Bloodborne and other um factors correlated with youth um as a therapeutic. You really put that on the map in a serious way. And I I really want to congratulate you for doing that on a backdrop of uh Dracula stories and kind of sensationalism around that. You you're clearly a serious scientist taking things on seriously and also measuring mult multiple factors from blood as you know has a kind of a Complicated history but you've really moved this forward in a in a um in a very rigorous way and
so that's awesome. >> What are you thinking about these days that I wouldn't know about? >> Thanks for the opportunity. Yeah. So, one thing that um should later this week actually be um publicly available on on a pre-print server. So, we took this idea of looking at um organs and you know getting an estimate of how old is your brain or your heart. We took this To the next level and ask can we build similar models and estimate how old cells are in your body. So we have many different cell types, right? That's how we
have specialized organs. So we were able to with the current technology that measures these thousands of proteins, we were able to assign proteins to 40 different cell types. And so we can now make estimates of specific cell types in your body. One of the most striking finding was We looked in people with different neurodeenerative diseases and asked how old are all their different cell types and we find in this rare disease called um amiotrophic laterals sclerosis or ALS in in the US we often call it lugaric's disease because lugaric was this baseball player who got
this devastating disease. It's a muscle weakness that often progresses extremely quickly and people die. Um, and what we found is that these individuals had extremely old An enrichment in extremely old muscle cells, skeletal muscle cells in particular, and also heart muscle cells, cardiammyioides. So there was this very strong association. And then we looked in a progressive in a a longitudinal study cross-sectional but where we had 20 years followup. It's called the UK bio bank. So we had blood samples from people when they entered their stud this study healthy and then a number of People developed
about 250 developed ALS over the course of 15 years. And we we found a strongly increased risk to develop the disease if they had these extremely old muscle cells. >> So here we have now a a much finer resolution and granularity where we can get more predictive power. We can get more precise prediction of what type of disease you might get. And of course at the molecular level and the cellular level we we know where the problem might Be right it's not just the whole organ but now we know which cell type. Another one was
there's these cells we call aststerytes in the brain. We find a very strong association of the age of aststerytes and development of Alzheimer's disease much stronger than just the brain age. So the age of your whole brain when we look now at these individual cells they are very strong predictor of Alzheimer's disease especially together with a genetic risk Factor. So that's something that we have been developing and really excited about. But my ultimate greatest stimulation right now is to um build a map of the human proteome across different genetic diseases. So what I'm trying to
do is to ask if somebody has a disease that is caused by a single genetic mutation and there's about 6 7,000 such we call them monogenic diseases where if you have a mutation you will get a disease childhood disease Or an adult disease. So what I want to do is to look at individuals with these mutations and profile their plasma. basically measure all the proteins and see are they different from healthy people. And if you do that across hundreds of diseases, you basically get a picture of how our body responds to the disruption of specific
genes. And the idea is that this will allow us to look at any type of disease where we don't know how it's caused and then say This looks like this genetic disease. Basically what we've been doing in animals with worms, right, where we knock out every gene or in flies, use the human experiment, if you will. And this may be a bit disparaging. These are obviously people who have diseases, but there are repositories where uh people volunteer to make these samples available for research. And so uh we have had the opportunity already to look at
25 Different genetic diseases and we find these very specific patterns. So that's what I want to build and then make it publicly available so that any researcher can ask how does my protein of interest that I want to study, how does it change in these different genetic diseases and learn about how they're related to each other and which biological pathways they may um change. That's what motivates me the most. >> I love it. I I uh it's so clear that You're a driven person and it's uh learning about what the next Vista is is is
always exciting. Um and again, thanks for the incredible work that you've been doing for all these years. You know, bringing a level of rigor and seriousness to something that um prior to that was just kind of tossed around as kind of an observation and a and something to discuss at parties, you know, young blood and this kind of thing. you're clearly um shedding light On on real mechanistic knowledge and the ability to measure aging of different organs now I think is is a tremendous technology. I'm very curious about that. I know a number of other
people will be we'll put links to the various things in papers etc. Uh, and I also want to thank you for coming here, taking time out of your busy schedule, your lab, your family, your vineyard, plural, to educate us on health and on health span and on the relationship between Youthfulness and aging and um and what we can do to to really ameliate the the degradation of health span. You're developing the things that change lives for the better. So, thank you so much. I really appreciate you. >> Thank you so much for having me. >>
Yeah. and come back again and tell us about all the other discoveries and I'll I'll buy a bottle of the wine from your vineyard and I'll gift it to one of the drinkers in my life. >> Sounds good. >> All right. >> Thank you very much. >> Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with Dr. Tony Weiss Corey. To learn more about his work and to find links to the various resources we discussed, please see the show note captions. If you're learning from and or enjoying this podcast, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. That's
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those in the comment section on YouTube. I do read all the comments. For those of you that haven't heard, I have a new book coming out. It's my very first book. It's entitled Protocols: An Operating Manual for the Human Body. This is a book that I've been working on for more than 5 years, and that's based on more than 30 years of research and experience. And it covers protocols for Everything from sleep to exercise to stress control protocols related to focus and motivation. And of course, I provide the scientific substantiation for the protocols that are
included. The book is now available by pre-sale at protocolsbook.com. There you can find links to various vendors. You can pick the one that you like best. Again, the book is called Protocols, an operating manual for the human body. And if you're not already Following me on social media, I am Huberman Lab on all social media platforms. So that's Instagram, X, Threads, Facebook, and LinkedIn. And on all those platforms, I discuss science and science related tools, some of which overlaps with the content of the Huberman Lab podcast, but much of which is distinct from the information
on the Hubberman Lab podcast. Again, it's Huberman Lab on all social media platforms. And if you haven't already Subscribed to our neural network newsletter, the neural network newsletter is a zerocost monthly newsletter that includes podcast summaries as well as what we call protocols in the form of 1 to three-page PDFs that cover everything from how to optimize your sleep, how to optimize dopamine, deliberate cold exposure. We have a foundational fitness protocol that covers cardiovascular training and resistance training. All of that is Available completely zero cost. You simply go to hubermanlab.com, go to the menu tab
in the top right corner, scroll down to newsletter, and enter your email. And I should emphasize that we do not share your email with anybody. Thank you once again for joining me for today's discussion with Dr. Tony Weiss Corey. And last, but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science. >> [music]