Chapter 8: Checkpoints Alpha, Bravo, Charlie: nutrient-sensing and chronic disease
Page 124
“Doesn’t every cell need oxygen” |
“99 percent of the bacteria in our intestine, called obligate anaerobes, don’t need oxygen” |
J. Lloyd-Price et al. “The Healthy Human Microbiome,” Genome Med. 8 (2016): 51. |
Page 125
“because that’s mitochondrial dysfunction as well” |
“a common disease of aging, called sarcopenia, or loss of muscle mass” |
Page 128
“opens the glucose floodgates of the cell” |
“the PI3-kinase inhibitors became much more effective” |
“determines how wide the door swings open” |
Page 129
“will keep mitochondria functioning optimally” |
“and improve insulin sensitivity” |
“Sugar, of course” |
“Sugar, of course” |
“That’s the job of the third checkpoint called mTOR” |
“but all three at once because it alters the growth phase of the cell” |
“key link between what’s in the cell versus what happens to the cell” |
“mTOR is the “holy grail” of cell fate” |
“target of most current longevity drugs” |
Page 130
“As you might expect, mTOR is highly sensitive to diet” |
“bone and cardiovascular health” |
“activating AMP-kinase can shut down mTOR in its tracks” |
Page 133
“they demonstrate reduced cancer growth” |
“they demonstrate reduced cancer growth” |
“they demonstrate reduced cancer growth” |
“they demonstrate reduced cancer growth” |
“increased longevity” |
N. Barzilai et al. “Metformin as a Tool to Target Aging,” Cell Metab. 23 (2016): 1060. |
“increased longevity” |
“increased longevity” |