A randomized, double blind human clinical trial conducted by researchers
at Baylor College of Medicine reveals that supplementation with GlyNAC –
a combination of glycine and N-acetylcysteine – improves many
age-associated defects in older humans and powerfully promotes healthy
aging. This is relevant because until now, there have been no solutions
toward improving many of these age-related declines in people.
Published in theJournal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences,
the study shows that older humans taking GlyNAC for 16-weeks improved
many characteristic defects of aging. This includes oxidative stress,
glutathione deficiency and multiple aging hallmarks affecting
mitochondrial dysfunction, mitophagy, inflammation, insulin resistance,
endothelial dysfunction, genomic damage, stem cell fatigue and cellular
senescence. These were associated with improvements in muscle strength,
gait speed, exercise capacity, waist circumference and blood pressure.
“This is the first randomized clinical trial of GlyNAC supplementation
in older humans, and it found that a wide variety of age-associated
abnormalities improved in older adults supplemented with GlyNAC, while
no improvements were seen in those receiving placebo,” said
corresponding author Dr. Rajagopal Sekhar, professor of medicine - endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism at Baylor.
The improvements in oxidative stress, glutathione levels and
mitochondrial function in the muscle tissue of older humans taking
GlyNAC were similar to the improvements in organs such as the heart,
liver and kidneys of aged mice supplemented with GlyNAC as reported in
the researchers’ recent publication.
Taken together, the results of these studies show that GlyNAC
supplementation can improve these defects in many different organs of
the body. “GlyNAC supplementation in aging mice increased their length
of life mice by 24%,” said Sekhar. “Gait speed is reported
to be associated with survival in older humans. Our randomized clinical
trial found a significant improvement in gait speed in older humans
supplemented with GlyNAC. This raises the interesting question of
whether GlyNAC supplementation could have implications for survival in
people”.
For the last 20 years, Sekhar has been studying natural aging in humans
and animal models to understand why age-related declines occur and how
to correct them. His work brings mitochondria, known as the batteries of
the cell, as well as free radicals and glutathione to discussions about
how they are connected. Sekhar’s work and discoveries could also help
explain why we age and how to improve health while aging.
Mitochondria dysfunction, oxidative stress and aging
Mitochondria generate energy needed for supporting cellular functions.
Therefore, normal mitochondrial function is critically important for a
healthy life. Sekhar believes that improving the health of
malfunctioning mitochondria in aging is the key to healthy aging.
“Energy supports life and mitochondria provide energy. I believe that
mitochondrial health is vitally important to our well-being, and
maintaining mitochondrial health as we age should be a high priority in
our efforts to improve overall health,” said Sekhar.
However, the ability of mitochondria to work well declines as we age.
How to improve the ability of these failing mitochondria to work is not
well understood, and therefore no solutions have been available.
Sekhar’s group discovered earlier that
supplementing GlyNAC in aged mice corrected malfunctioning
mitochondria. However, to definitively determine whether GlyNAC
supplementation benefited people, a placebo-controlled randomized
clinical trial was required.
Sekhar and his team conducted and completed such a randomized clinical
trial which found that older people have widespread mitochondrial damage
and other age-associated defects compared to young people. After
16-weeks of GlyNAC supplementation, mitochondrial function of older
people improve toward levels found in young people. This was accompanied
by improvements in multiple additional outcomes as reported in the
publication. Analysis of the molecular data from the trial suggests that
the GlyNAC supplementation is able to fill cells with younger and more
efficient mitochondria. “Collectively these exciting new discoveries
hold great promise for improving our mitochondrial and general health as
we age,” Sekhar said.
A second vital benefit offered by supplementing GlyNAC is that it also
helps protect the body from an important problem called oxidative
stress. Oxidative stress is caused by high levels of toxic waste
products known as reactive oxygen species or free-radicals. Oxidative
stress can damage our cells, membranes, lipids, proteins and DNA, and is
very common in aging. Glutathione is a natural antioxidant. Glutathione
is made every day inside our cells and it works by protecting cells
from harmful oxidative stress. However, in older people, glutathione
levels are very low and the harmful oxidative stress is very high.
GlyNAC supplementation corrects glutathione deficiency and lowers
oxidative stress in older humans back to youthful levels, thereby
solving both problems.
Sekhar believes that the restoration of mitochondrial health and
correction of oxidative stress with GlyNAC supplementation are two
powerful reasons which help explain why so many other age-related
defects improve. It also accounts for the wide spectrum of health
benefits.
Taking GlyNAC is not the same as taking glutathione: Introducing the ‘Power of 3’
“It is really important to understand that this trial supplemented
GlyNAC, and did not supplement glutathione,” says Sekhar. “This is
because our body does not get its glutathione from food, but the body
has to make its own glutathione every day. All our organs maintain
different levels of glutathione in a delicate balance that favors
health. Too little glutathione cannot fight the harmful oxidative
stress, and too much glutathione could lead to harmful reductive
stress,” said Sekhar. “This is why GlyNAC is a natural solution for
correcting glutathione deficiency, because it provides the raw materials
to help cells to make their own glutathione in just the right amount.
We have seen that this repeatedly in all our prior studies supplementing
GlyNAC, including this trial.”
“One of the intriguing questions from this trial is why so many
improvements occur toward promoting health. We believe that this is due
to the combined effort of three separate components – glycine, cysteine
(from NAC) and glutathione, and not just due to glutathione itself.
Glycine and cysteine are both very important for cellular health on
their own, and GlyNAC provides both. Glycine and cysteine are building
blocks to form glutathione, which also has health benefits. We believe
that the improvements in this trial and in our previous studies are the
result of the combined effects of glycine and NAC and glutathione, and
we refer to this combination as the ‘Power of 3,” said Sekhar.
GlyNAC improves several aging hallmarks in aging
The population of older adults is expected to exceed 2.1 billion by
2050, according to the World Health Organization. This predicted
increase in the older human population will result in a rise of the need
for healthcare and will intensify the stress on healthcare systems
around the world. To understand what causes unhealthy aging, scientific
research has identified nine aging hallmarks that represent specific
defects that are believed to contribute to health decline while aging.
“It is believed that correcting aging hallmarks could help people age in
a healthier way,” Sekhar said. “However, we do not fully understand why
these aging hallmarks occur in the first place, and therefore there
have been no proven solutions via human randomized clinical trials to
improve or correct aging hallmarks in aging humans.”
The aging hallmarks that improved are mitochondrial dysfunction, altered
intercellular communication, nutrient sensing, loss of proteostasis,
genomic instability, cellular senescence and stem cell fatigue. The
study participants were instructed not to change their usual diet or
physical activity; therefore, nothing changed except for the GlyNAC
supplementation. “This tells us that benefits were due to GlyNAC
supplementation. But we were really surprised to see so many aging
hallmarks improve. This level of improvement offers clues as to how and
why these aging hallmarks may be connected to one another,” says Sekhar.
GlyNAC improves muscle strength in aging
GlyNAC supplementation improved muscle strength in the upper and lower
extremity and a trend toward increased exercise capacity. “These
findings could have additional implications for improving the health of
older humans, especially in terms of being able to be more physically
active,” said Sekhar.
“This study was effort intensive and took many years to complete. I take
this opportunity to thank all my co-investigators, nursing staff, and
everyone who helped with this trial. I especially thank all the trial
participants who volunteered to participate in this research,” Sekhar
said.
Sekhar led the study team consisting of Premranjan Kumar, Chun Liu,
James Suliburk, Jean W. Hsu, Raja Muthupillai, Farook Jahoor, Charles G.
Minard and George E. Taffet, all at Baylor College of Medicine. For
this trial, Sekhar received funding support from the National Institutes
of Health/National Institute of Aging, and philanthropic support from
the McNair Medical Institute at the Robert and Janice McNair Foundation
in Houston, TX.
Baylor College of Medicine holds a patent on GlyNAC, which has been
licensed to Nestlé Health Science. GlyNAC is marketed in the United
States by Nestlé Health Science under the name CelltrientTM Cellular
Protect. Nestlé Health Science did not provide financial or material
support for this research work.
As he moves forward, Sekhar plans to expand on his work to understand
more about the health benefits of GlyNAC supplementation on cells,
tissues and organs of the body. He plans on seeking funding to conduct
larger clinical trials in more typical older humans to increase our
understanding of how GlyNAC could improve health in aging. Additionally,
as reported in their previously published exploratory study,
Sekhar’s group found that GlyNAC supplementation in older humans could
improve memory and cognition. He has studied this further in aged mice
and found that GlyNAC supplementation appears to correct multiple
age-related declines directly in the brain, and was associated with
improvements in memory and brain health – a report on these emerging new
and exciting findings is in development.
Article shared from
Homa Shalchi
Houston, TX - Aug 17, 2022