Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Red wine can protect human cells against damage

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Dec, 2014 11:14 AM
    A substance found in red wine may protect the body against age-related diseases by stimulating an ancient evolutionary defence mechanism that protects human cells against damage, a US study has suggested.
     
    Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) found that the substance -- resveratrol -- once touted as an elixir of youth -- powerfully activates an evolutionarily ancient stress response in human cells.
     
    "This stress response represents a layer of biology that has been largely overlooked. Resveratrol turns out to activate it at much lower concentrations than those used in prior studies," said senior investigator Paul Schimmel, a professor and member of the Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology at TSRI, US.
     
    Based on these results, "it is conceivable that moderate consumption of a couple of glasses of red wine would give a person enough resveratrol to evoke a protective effect via this pathway," said lead author Mathew Sajish, a senior research associate in the Schimmel laboratory.
     
    Resveratrol is a compound produced in grapes, cacao beans, Japanese knotweed and some other plants in response to stresses including infection, drought and ultraviolet radiation.
     
    Why would resveratrol, a protein produced in plants, be so potent and specific in activating a major stress response pathway in human cells?
     
    Probably because it does much the same in plant cells, and probably again via TyrRS -- a protein so fundamental to life, due to its linkage to an amino acid, that it hasn't changed much in the hundreds of millions of years since plants and animals went their separate evolutionary ways.
     
    "We believe that TyrRS has evolved to act as a top-level switch or activator of a fundamental cell-protecting mechanism that works in virtually all forms of life," Sajish added.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Experimental Ebola drug cures infected monkeys

    Experimental Ebola drug cures infected monkeys
    In what appears to provide new hope for people infected with the deadly Ebola virus, scientists have successfully treated all the Ebola infected monkeys...

    Experimental Ebola drug cures infected monkeys

    Beware! Cigarette substitutes bad for bones

    Beware! Cigarette substitutes bad for bones
    Are you trying e-cigarettes or other nicotine replacement therapies to overcome addiction to cigarette smoking? Be warned, as they are not...

    Beware! Cigarette substitutes bad for bones

    Electric currents may boost memory

    Electric currents may boost memory
    Electric currents could be the key to treating memory impairments caused by conditions such as stroke, early-stage Alzheimer's disease...

    Electric currents may boost memory

    Girl-gang members at greater risk of unprotected sex

    Girl-gang members at greater risk of unprotected sex
    Young girls who join gangs to find their lost freedom are at a greater risk of unprotected sex with multiple partners and substance abuse, says a new study....

    Girl-gang members at greater risk of unprotected sex

    Marijuana may treat Alzheimer's

    Marijuana may treat Alzheimer's
    Extremely low levels of a compound in marijuana called delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol or THC may slow or halt the progression of Alzheimer's disease....

    Marijuana may treat Alzheimer's

    Eating tomatoes daily can reduce prostate cancer risk

    Eating tomatoes daily can reduce prostate cancer risk
    Men who eat tomatoes over ten portions a week have an 18 percent lower risk of developing prostate cancer, new research shows....

    Eating tomatoes daily can reduce prostate cancer risk