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The Randle Cycle (Glucose-Fatty Acid Cycle)

Also see:
Master List – Ray Peat, PhD Interviews
Ray Peat, PhD on Low Blood Sugar & Stress Reaction
Aldosterone, Sodium Deficiency, and Insulin Resistance
Ray Peat, PhD Quotes on Therapeutic Effects of Niacinamide
Diabetes: Conversion of Alpha-cells into Beta-cells
Errors in Nutrition: Essential Fatty Acids
Women, Estrogen, and Circulating DHA
Insulin Inhibits Lipolysis
PUFA Breakdown Products Depress Mitochondrial Respiration
PUFA Decrease Cellular Energy Production
Free Fatty Acids Suppress Cellular Respiration
Commentary on Type 2 Diabetes
Soybean oil causes more obesity than coconut oil and fructose
The common oil that science now shows is worse than sugar
Consumption of Fatty Acids Linked to Type 2 Diabetes
The Dangers of Fat Metabolism and PUFA: Why You Don’t Want to be a Fat Burner

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Quotes by Ray Peat, PhD:
“The antagonism between fat and sugar that Randle described can involve the suppression of sugar oxidation when the concentration of fats in the bloodstream is increased by eating fatty food, or by releasing fats from the tissues by lipolysis, but it can also involve the suppression of fat oxidation by inhibiting the release of fatty acids from the tissues, when a sufficient amount of sugar is eaten.”

“The inhibition of fat oxidation, and supporting sugar oxidation, now seems to be appropriate for preventing or treating any age-related degenerative disease.”

“The protective effects of sugar, and the harmful effects of excessive fat metabolism, are now being widely recognized, in every field of physiology.”

“There is a growing recognition that a persistent increase of free fatty acids in the serum, which is seen in shock, heart failure, and aging, indicates a bad prognosis, but there is no generally recognized explanation for the fact that free fatty acids are harmful. I want to mention some evidence showing that it is the accumulation of polyunsaturated fats in the body that makes them harmful.”

“Simply getting outside the world of compartmentalized diseases, there is an abundance of evidence showing the variety of ways in which cells can fail. Energy is needed for cell maintenance and adaptation, and the type of fuel used to provide the energy is crucial. Fatty acids interfere with the oxidation of glucose, and this effect can be seen in heart failure, immunodeficiency, dementia, as well as in simple stress, diabetes, and many other simple situations (dementia: Montine and Morrow, 2005; Yaqoob, et al., 1994).”

“When the tissues are saturated with those antithyroid fats [PUFA], metabolism slows, especially when any stress, such as cold or hunger, increases the concentration of free fatty acids in the blood stream.”

“The competition between fatty acids and glucose, which has been called the “Randle cycle” for about 50 years, can be applied to the treatment of diabetes and other degenerative/stress problems by adjusting the diet, or by using supplements such as niacinamide and aspirin, which improve glucose oxidation by lowering the free fatty acids in the serum.”

“In the Randle effect (it’s called the “Randle cycle,” but there is no cycle), increasing the amount of fat in the bloodstream decreases the ability of cells to metabolize glucose; glucose tolerance decreases, as in diabetes, except that the response to fat is instantaneous. Respiration decreases, mitochondria retain calcium, which tends to accumulate until it destroys the mitochondria. The calcium, when it is released from the mitochondria, causes excitation to increase. Stimulation without efficient energy production leads to proteolysis and apoptosis or other forms of cell death. Sugars replace carbon dioxide and acetate on lysines. This process is involved in diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, arthritis, and other degenerative diseases, probably including osteoporosis. Mitochondrial damage tends to increase the production of lactic acid instead of carbon dioxide, and lactic acid can stimulate the inappropriate overgrowth of blood vessels, as occurs in the eyes in diabetes. During stress and aging, free fatty acids appear in the bloodstream in large quantities.”

“The effect of diabetes is to keep the respiratory quotient low, since a respiratory quotient of one corresponds to the oxidation of pure carbohydrate, and extreme diabetics oxidize fat in preference to carbohydrate, and may have a quotient just a little above 0.7. The results of Brown’s and Burr’s experiments could be interpreted to mean that the polyunsaturated fats not only lower the metabolic rate, but especially interfere with the metabolism of sugars. In other words, they suggest that the normal diet is diabetogenic.”

“Estrogen and stress cause increased levels of free fatty acids to circulate. The polyunsaturated fatty acids are immunosuppressive, antithyroid, diabetogenic, inhibit respiration, and promote the actions of estrogen and cortisol.”

“It’s the prolonged shock-like state that contributes to the degenerative diseases, which typically begin with a sort of diabetes, an inability to use glucose for energy because of the accumulation of too much of the wrong kind of fat.”

If diabetes means that cells can’t absorb or metabolize glucose, then any cellular function that requires glucose will be impaired, despite the presence of glucose in the blood. It is the intracellular absence of glucose which is problematic, rather than its extracellular excess.”

“On the organismic level, it explains why estrogen mimics “shock,” releasing histamine and activating the nervous and glandular stress response system. The inefficiency of metabolism which doesn’t use oxygen in the normal way causes glucose to be used rapidly, and this in itself is enough to trigger the release of pituitary ACTH and adrenal cortisol. The ACTH, and related hormones, liberate free fatty acids, which cells take up instead of glucose, and this (in the so-called Randall cycle) further limits the body’s ability to oxidize glucose.”

“In 1963, P.J. Randle clearly described the inhibition of glucose oxidation by free fatty acids. Later, when lipid emulsions came into use for intravenous feeding in hospitals, it was found that they blocked glucose oxidation, lowered the metabolic rate, suppressed immunity, and increased lipid peroxidation and oxidative stress.”

“On a diet lacking the “essential” unsaturated fatty acids, Benhamou (1995) found that nonobese diabetic mice didn’t develop diabetes, that is, the unsaturated fats themselves, without obesity, are sufficient to cause diabetes.”

“But when cells are exposed to PUFA, their ability to use glucose is blocked, increasing their exposure to these fat.”

“Sugar, by reducing the level of free fatty acids in the body, actually tends to protect against these toxic effects of the PUFA. Diabetes, like cancer, has been known for a long time to be promoted by unsaturated oils in the diet, rather than by sugar. The seed oil industry has been more effective than the sugar industry in lobbying and advertising, and the effects can be seen in the assumptions that shape medical and biological research.”

“Diabetics typically have elevated lactate, which shows that glucose doesn’t have a problem getting into their cells, just getting oxidized. Sugars, if they are consumed in quantities beyond the ability to metabolize them (and that easily happens in the presence of PUFA) are converted into saturated fatty acids, which have antistress, antiinflammatory effects. Many propaganda experiments are set up, feeding a grossly excessive amount of polyunsaturated fat, causing sugar to form fat, specifically so they can publish their silly diet recommendations, which supposedly explain the obesity epidemic, but the government figures I cited show that vegetable fat consumption has increased, sugar hasn’t. My articles have a lot of information on the mechanisms, such as the so-called ‘Randle cycle,’ in which fatty acids shut down the ability to oxidize sugar. Polyunsaturated fats do many things that increase blood sugar inappropriately, and my articles review several of the major mechanisms. Several years ago, medical people started talking about the harmful effects of insulin, such as stimulating fat production, so ‘insulin resistance’ which keeps a high level of insulin from producing obesity would seem to be a good thing, but the medical obesity culture really isn’t thinking very straight. One factor in the ‘insulin resistance’ created by PUFA involves estrogen—chronic accumulation of PUFA in the tissues increases the production of estrogen, and the polyunsaturated free fatty acids intensify the actions of estrogen, which acts in several ways to interfere with glucose oxidation.”

High free fatty acids in the blood impair glucose oxidation. Muscle glycogen synthesis is also negatively affected. High free fatty acids are found in the diabetics, the insulin resistant, the obese, and AIDS patients. Anything that promotes the release of fatty acids into the blood is a factor to consider in diabetes progression or correction (i.e. estrogen, stress, growth hormone, exercise, adrenaline, cortisol, serotonin, lactic acid, low thyroid, malnutrition, darkness).

Lancet. 1963 Apr 13;1(7285):785-9.
The glucose fatty-acid cycle. Its role in insulin sensitivity and the metabolic disturbances of diabetes mellitus.
RANDLE PJ, GARLAND PB, HALES CN, NEWSHOLME EA.

Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2009 Sep;297(3):E578-91. Epub 2009 Jun 16.
The Randle cycle revisited: a new head for an old hat.
Hue L, Taegtmeyer H.
In 1963, Lancet published a paper by Randle et al. that proposed a “glucose-fatty acid cycle” to describe fuel flux between and fuel selection by tissues. The original biochemical mechanism explained the inhibition of glucose oxidation by fatty acids. Since then, the principle has been confirmed by many investigators. At the same time, many new mechanisms controlling the utilization of glucose and fatty acids have been discovered. Here, we review the known short- and long-term mechanisms involved in the control of glucose and fatty acid utilization at the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial level in mammalian muscle and liver under normal and pathophysiological conditions. They include allosteric control, reversible phosphorylation, and the expression of key enzymes. However, the complexity is formidable. We suggest that not all chapters of the Randle cycle have been written.

Br J Nutr. 2007 May;97(5):809-13.
In appreciation of Sir Philip Randle: the glucose-fatty acid cycle.
Sugden MC.
The coordinated regulation of metabolic fuel selection is crucial to energy homeostasis. Philip Randle and his colleagues developed the fundamental concept of interplay between carbohydrate and lipid fuels in relation to the requirement for energy utilisation and storage. Their insight has fashioned current understanding of the regulation of metabolism in health and disease, as well as providing a springboard for research into the roles of lipid derivatives in insulin resistance and, at the transcriptional level, lipid-regulated nuclear hormone receptors.

Biochem Soc Trans. 2003 Dec;31(Pt 6):1115-9.
The glucose-fatty acid cycle: a physiological perspective.
Frayn KN.
Glucose and fatty acids are the major fuels for mammalian metabolism and it is clearly essential that mechanisms exist for mutual co-ordination of their utilization. The glucose-fatty acid cycle, as it was proposed in 1963, describes one set of mechanisms by which carbohydrate and fat metabolism interact. Since that time, the importance of the glucose-fatty acid cycle has been confirmed repeatedly, in particular by elevation of plasma non-esterified fatty acid concentrations and demonstration of an impairment of glucose utilization. Since 1963 further means have been elucidated by which glucose and fatty acids interact. These include stimulation of hepatic glucose output by fatty acids, potentiation of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion by fatty acids, and the cellular mechanism whereby high glucose and insulin concentrations inhibit fatty acid oxidation via malonyl-CoA regulation of carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1. The last of these mechanisms, discovered by Denis McGarry and Daniel Foster in 1977, provides an almost exact complement to the mechanism described in the glucose-fatty acid cycle whereby high concentrations of fatty acids inhibit glucose utilization. These additional discoveries have not detracted from the important of the glucose-fatty acid cycle: rather, they have reinforced the importance of mechanisms whereby glucose and fat can interact.

Can J Appl Physiol. 1998 Dec;23(6):558-69.
The role of glucose in the regulation of substrate interaction during exercise.
Sidossis LS.
Glucose and fatty acids are the main energy sources for oxidative metabolism in endurance exercise. Although a reciprocal relationship exists between glucose and fatty acid contribution to energy production for a given metabolic rate, the controlling mechanism remains debatable. Randle et al.’s (1963) glucose-fatty acid cycle hypothesis provides a potential mechanism for regulating substrate interaction during exercise. The cornerstone of this hypothesis is that the rate of lipolysis, and therefore fatty acid availability, controls how glucose and fatty acids contribute to energy production. Increasing fatty acid availability attenuates carbohydrate oxidation during exercise, mainly via sparing intramuscular glycogen. However, there is little evidence for a direct inhibitory effect of fatty acids on glucose oxidation. We found that glucose directly determines the rate of fat oxidation by controlling fatty acid transport into the mitochondria. We propose that the intracellular availability of glucose, rather than fatty acids, regulates substrate interaction during exercise.

Am J Physiol. 1989 Jun;256(6 Pt 1):E747-52.
Impairment of glucose disposal by infusion of triglycerides in humans: role of glycemia.
Felley CP, Felley EM, van Melle GD, Frascarolo P, Jéquier E, Felber JP.
The present study was designed to assess the role of hyperglycemia (150 mg/dl) vs. euglycemia (90 mg/dl) on glucose metabolism in vivo during the infusion of a triglyceride emulsion (Intralipid). Seven young healthy volunteers were studied on four occasions using the hyperinsulinemic clamp technique, twice during euglycemia and twice during hyperglycemia, without or with Intralipid. Glucose oxidation (O) was calculated from continuous respiratory exchange measurements, and glucose storage (S) was obtained as the difference between total glucose disposal (M) and O. Two-way analysis of variance with interaction term demonstrated 1) a significant increase for M with hyperglycemia and a decrease with Intralipid; no interaction, and 2) in euglycemia, O/M and S/M occurred in one-to-one ratios; on the other hand, during 150-mg/dl hyperglycemia, the ratio dropped roughly to 1:2. Intralipid had no effect on the ratio, and no interaction could be observed. These results suggest the existence of physiological regulatory mechanisms by which 1) the rise in plasma free fatty acid inhibits both oxidative and nonoxidative glucose disposal, and 2) the rise in glycemia stimulates predominantly nonoxidative glucose disposal.

Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2007 Mar;10(2):142-8.
Free fatty acids and insulin resistance.
Delarue J, Magnan C.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW:
Dysregulation of free fatty acid metabolism is a key event responsible for insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. According to the glucose-fatty acid cycle of Randle, preferential oxidation of free fatty acids over glucose plays a major role in insulin sensitivity and the metabolic disturbances of diabetes mellitus. However, other mechanisms are now described to explain the molecular basis of insulin resistance.
RECENT FINDINGS:
Recent studies have suggested that local accumulation of fat metabolites such as ceramides, diacylglycerol or acyl-CoA, inside skeletal muscle and liver, may activate a serine kinase cascade leading to defects in insulin signalling and glucose transport. Inflammation and oxidative stress are also potent mechanisms which could lead to a state of insulin resistance. Finally, modulation of transcription by free fatty acids through their binding to peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors could also contribute to impaired glucose metabolism.
SUMMARY:
The increase in free fatty acid flux resulting from increased lipolysis secondary to adipose-tissue insulin resistance induces or aggravates insulin resistance in liver and muscle through direct or indirect (from triglyceride deposits) generation of metabolites, altering the insulin signalling pathway. Alleviating the excess of free fatty acids is a target for the treatment of insulin resistance.

Proc Assoc Am Physicians. 1999 May-Jun;111(3):241-8.
Free fatty acids, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Boden G.
Evidence is presented that shows that free fatty acids (FFA) are one important link between obesity, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes. Plasma FFA levels are elevated in most obese subjects, and physiological elevations of plasma FFA inhibit insulin-stimulated glucose uptake into muscle. This peripheral insulin resistance is caused by an FFA-induced defect, which develops 3-4 hr after raising plasma FFA, in insulin-stimulated glucose transport or phosphorylation, or both. This resistance is also caused by a second defect, which develops after 4-6 hr, consisting of inhibition of glycogen synthase activity. Whether elevated plasma FFA levels inhibit insulin action on endogenous glucose production (EGP), that is, cause central insulin resistance, is more difficult to demonstrate. On the one hand, FFA increase gluconeogenesis, which enhances EGP; on the other hand, FFA increase insulin secretion, which decreases EGP. Basal plasma FFA support approximately one third of basal insulin secretion in diabetic and nondiabetic subjects and, hence, are responsible for some of the hyperinsulinemia in obese, normoglycemic patients. In addition, elevated plasma FFA levels potentiate glucose-stimulated insulin secretion acutely and during prolonged exposure (48 hr). It is hypothesized that obese subjects who are genetically predisposed to develop type 2 diabetes will become partially “lipid blind,” that is, unable to compensate for their FFA-induced insulin resistance with FFA-induced insulin oversecretion. The resulting insulin resistance/secretion deficit will then have to be compensated for with glucose-induced insulin secretion, which, because of their partial “glucose blindness,” will result in hyperglycemia and eventually in type 2 diabetes.

Endocr Pract. 2001 Jan-Feb;7(1):44-51.
Free fatty acids-the link between obesity and insulin resistance.
Boden G.
OBJECTIVE:
To present evidence that free fatty acids (FFA) are an important link between obesity and insulin resistance.
METHODS:
The role of FFA in peripheral insulin resistance, hepatic insulin resistance, insulin secretion, and type 2 diabetes is discussed.
RESULTS:
Obesity is invariably associated with insulin resistance. In most obese subjects, plasma FFA levels are increased. Physiologic increases in plasma FFA levels cause insulin resistance in both diabetic and nondiabetic subjects by producing several metabolic defects: (1) FFA inhibit insulin-stimulated glucose uptake at the level of glucose transport or phosphorylation (or both); (2) FFA inhibit insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis; and (3) FFA inhibit insulin-stimulated glucose oxidation. (This last-mentioned defect probably does not contribute to insulin resistance.) FFA probably also cause hepatic insulin resistance, which results in increased rates of endogenous glucose production in relationship to the prevailing degree of hyperinsulinemia. Lastly, FFA support between 30 and 50% of basal insulin secretion and potentiate glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in short-term and long-term settings. The stimulatory action of FFA on b-cells enables obese individuals who do not have a genetic predisposition to develop type 2 diabetes mellitus to compensate for their FFA-potentiated insulin resistance with an increase in FFA-mediated insulin secretion. In contrast, subjects who are genetically predisposed to develop type 2 diabetes may be unable to secrete sufficient amounts of insulin to compensate for their FFA-induced insulin resistance. This situation will lead to an increase in blood glucose concentration and eventually to type 2 diabetes.
CONCLUSION:
FFA have been shown to have an important contributing role in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance in human obesity.

Diabetes. 1997 Jan;46(1):3-10.
Role of fatty acids in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance and NIDDM.
Boden G.
Evidence is reviewed that free fatty acids (FFAs) are one important link between obesity and insulin resistance and NIDDM. First, plasma FFA levels are elevated in most obese subjects. Second, physiological elevations in plasma FFA concentrations inhibit insulin stimulated peripheral glucose uptake in a dose-dependent manner in normal controls and in patients with NIDDM. Two possible mechanisms are identified: 1) a fat-related inhibition of glucose transport or phosphorylation, which appears after 3-4 h of fat infusion, and 2) a decrease in muscle glycogen synthase activity, which appears after 4-6 h of fat infusion. Third, FFAs stimulate insulin secretion in nondiabetic individuals. Some of this insulin is transmitted in the peripheral circulation and is able to compensate for FFA-mediated peripheral insulin resistance. FFA-mediated portal hyperinsulinemia counteracts the stimulation of FFAs on hepatic glucose production (HGP) and thus prevents hepatic glucose overproduction. We speculate that, in obese individuals who are genetically predisposed to develop NIDDM, FFAs will eventually fail to promote insulin secretion. The stimulatory effect of FFAs on HGP would then become unchecked, resulting in hyperglycemia. Hence, continuously elevated levels of plasma FFAs may play a key role in the pathogenesis of NIDDM in predisposed individuals by impairing peripheral glucose utilization and by promoting hepatic glucose overproduction.

Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2002 Sep;5(5):545-9.
Interaction between free fatty acids and glucose metabolism.
Boden G.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW:
The prevalence of obesity and of type 2 diabetes mellitus are increasing at an accelerating rate in the USA and other industrialized countries. Free fatty acids (FFAs) have emerged as a major link between obesity and insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes mellitus. A review of the interaction between FFAs and glucose metabolism is therefore timely and relevant.
RECENT FINDINGS:
Acute and chronic elevations in plasma FFAs produce peripheral (muscle) and hepatic insulin resistance. In skeletal muscle, this process is associated with accumulation of intramyocellular triglyceride and diacylglycerol, and with activation of protein kinase C (the beta and delta isoforms). It is hypothesized that FFAs interfere with insulin signaling via protein kinase C-induced serine phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate-1. In the liver, FFAs cause insulin resistance by interfering with insulin suppression of glycogenolysis. In the beta cells, FFAs potentiate glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. It is postulated that this prevents the development type 2 diabetes mellitus in the majority (approximately 80%) of obese insulin-resistant people.
SUMMARY:
Elevated plasma FFA levels have been shown to account for up to 50% of insulin resistance in obese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Lowering of FFAs in these patients or interfering with steps in the pathway through which FFAs cause insulin resistance could be a new and promising approach to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Diabetes Care. 1996 Apr;19(4):394-5.
Fatty acids and insulin resistance.
Boden G.
We have demonstrated that physiological elevations in plasma free fatty acid concentrations inhibit insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in a dose-dependent manner in normal control subjects and in patients with NIDDM. Two possible mechanisms were identified: 1) a fat-related inhibition of glucose transport or phosphorylation that appeared after 3-4 h of fat infusion and 2) a decrease in muscle glycogen synthase activity that appeared after 4-6 h of fat infusion. We conclude that elevations of plasma FFAs caused insulin resistance and hence may play a significant role in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance in obesity and NIDDM.

J Clin Invest. 1996 June 15; 97(12): 2859–2865.
Mechanism of free fatty acid-induced insulin resistance in humans.
M Roden, T B Price, G Perseghin, K F Petersen, D L Rothman, G W Cline, and G I Shulman
To examine the mechanism by which lipids cause insulin resistance in humans, skeletal muscle glycogen and glucose-6-phosphate concentrations were measured every 15 min by simultaneous 13C and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in nine healthy subjects in the presence of low (0.18 +/- 0.02 mM [mean +/- SEM]; control) or high (1.93 +/- 0.04 mM; lipid infusion) plasma free fatty acid levels under euglycemic (approximately 5.2 mM) hyperinsulinemic (approximately 400 pM) clamp conditions for 6 h. During the initial 3.5 h of the clamp the rate of whole-body glucose uptake was not affected by lipid infusion, but it then decreased continuously to be approximately 46% of control values after 6 h (P < 0.00001). Augmented lipid oxidation was accompanied by a approximately 40% reduction of oxidative glucose metabolism starting during the third hour of lipid infusion (P < 0.05). Rates of muscle glycogen synthesis were similar during the first 3 h of lipid and control infusion, but thereafter decreased to approximately 50% of control values (4.0 +/- 1.0 vs. 9.3 +/- 1.6 mumol/[kg.min], P < 0.05). Reduction of muscle glycogen synthesis by elevated plasma free fatty acids was preceded by a fall of muscle glucose-6-phosphate concentrations starting at approximately 1.5 h (195 +/- 25 vs. control: 237 +/- 26 mM; P < 0.01). Therefore in contrast to the originally postulated mechanism in which free fatty acids were thought to inhibit insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in muscle through initial inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase these results demonstrate that free fatty acids induce insulin resistance in humans by initial inhibition of glucose transport/phosphorylation which is then followed by an approximately 50% reduction in both the rate of muscle glycogen synthesis and glucose oxidation.

Current Opinion in Endocrinology, Diabetes & Obesity: April 2011 – Volume 18 – Issue 2 – p 139–143
Obesity, insulin resistance and free fatty acids
Boden, Guenther
Purpose of review: To describe the role of free fatty acid (FFA) as a cause for insulin resistance in obese people.
Recent findings: Elevated plasma FFA levels can account for a large part of insulin resistance in obese patients with type 2 diabetes. Insulin resistance is clinically important because it is closely associated with several diseases including type 2 diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia and abnormalities in blood coagulation and fibrinolysis. These disorders are all independent risk factors for cardiovascular disease (heart attacks, strokes and peripheral arterial disease). The mechanisms by which FFA can cause insulin resistance, although not completely known, include generation of lipid metabolites (diacylglycerol), proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, MCP1) and cellular stress including oxidative and endoplasmic reticulum stress.
Summary: Increased plasma FFA levels are an important cause of obesity-associated insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease. Therapeutic application of this knowledge is hampered by the lack of readily accessible methods to measure FFA and by the lack of medications to lower plasma FFA levels.

Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2003 Sep;17(3):399-410.
Nutritional effects of fat on carbohydrate metabolism.
Boden G, Carnell LH.
Obesity is commonly associated with elevated plasma levels of free fatty acids (FFAs). High levels of FFA have emerged as a major link between obesity and insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes (T2DM). Thus, acute and chronic elevations of plasma FFAs produce insulin resistance in skeletal muscle and liver. In skeletal muscle, FFA-induced insulin resistance is associated with accumulation of intramyocellular triglyceride and diacylglycerol, and with activation of protein kinase C (the beta and delta isoforms). It is suggested that FFAs interfere with insulin signalling via PKC-induced serine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor substrate-1. In the liver, FFAs cause insulin resistance by interfering with insulin suppression of glycogenolysis. In beta-cells, FFAs potentiate glucose-stimulated insulin secretion acutely and chronically. It is postulated that this prevents the development of T2DM in most (>80%) obese insulin-resistant people who have FFA-mediated insulin resistance. Elevated levels of FFA also seem to activate a pro-inflammatory and pro-atherogenic pathway (the IkappaB/NFkappaB pathway) and may be responsible, at least in part, for the increase in atherosclerotic vascular disease seen in patients with T2DM. As increased plasma levels account for up to 50% of insulin resistance in obese patients with T2DM, lowering of plasma FFAs could be a new and promising approach to the treatment of T2DM.

Diabetes. 1999 Jun;48(6):1270-4.
Free fatty acid-induced insulin resistance is associated with activation of protein kinase C theta and alterations in the insulin signaling cascade.
Griffin ME, Marcucci MJ, Cline GW, Bell K, Barucci N, Lee D, Goodyear LJ, Kraegen EW, White MF, Shulman GI.
To examine the mechanism by which free fatty acids (FFAs) induce insulin resistance in vivo, awake chronically catheterized rats underwent a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp with or without a 5-h preinfusion of lipid/heparin to raise plasma FFA concentrations. Increased plasma FFAs resulted in insulin resistance as reflected by a approximately 35% reduction in the glucose infusion rate (P < 0.05 vs. control). The insulin resistance was associated with a 40-50% reduction in 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-determined rates of muscle glycogen synthesis (P < 0.01 vs. control) and muscle glucose oxidation (P < 0.01 vs. control), which in turn could be attributed to a approximately 25% reduction in glucose transport activity as assessed by 2-[1,2-3H]deoxyglucose uptake in vivo (P < 0.05 vs. control). This lipid-induced decrease in insulin-stimulated muscle glucose metabolism was associated with 1) a approximately 50% reduction in insulin-stimulated insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-1-associated phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3-kinase activity (P < 0.05 vs. control), 2) a blunting in insulin-stimulated IRS-1 tyrosine phosphorylation (P < 0.05, lipid-infused versus glycerol-infused), and 3) a four-fold increase in membrane-bound, or active, protein kinase C (PKC) theta (P < 0.05 vs. control). We conclude that acute elevations of plasma FFA levels for 5 h induce skeletal muscle insulin resistance in vivo via a reduction in insulin-stimulated muscle glycogen synthesis and glucose oxidation that can be attributed to reduced glucose transport activity. These changes are associated with abnormalities in the insulin signaling cascade and may be mediated by FFA activation of PKC theta.

Eur J Clin Invest. 2002 Jun;32 Suppl 3:14-23.
Free fatty acids in obesity and type 2 diabetes: defining their role in the development of insulin resistance and beta-cell dysfunction.
Boden G, Shulman GI.
Plasma free fatty acids (FFA) play important physiological roles in skeletal muscle, heart, liver and pancreas. However, chronically elevated plasma FFA appear to have pathophysiological consequences. Elevated FFA concentrations are linked with the onset of peripheral and hepatic insulin resistance and, while the precise action in the liver remains unclear, a model to explain the role of raised FFA in the development of skeletal muscle insulin resistance has recently been put forward. Over 30 years ago, Randle proposed that FFA compete with glucose as the major energy substrate in cardiac muscle, leading to decreased glucose oxidation when FFA are elevated. Recent data indicate that high plasma FFA also have a significant role in contributing to insulin resistance. Elevated FFA and intracellular lipid appear to inhibit insulin signalling, leading to a reduction in insulin-stimulated muscle glucose transport that may be mediated by a decrease in GLUT-4 translocation. The resulting suppression of muscle glucose transport leads to reduced muscle glycogen synthesis and glycolysis. In the liver, elevated FFA may contribute to hyperglycaemia by antagonizing the effects of insulin on endogenous glucose production. FFA also affect insulin secretion, although the nature of this relationship remains a subject for debate. Finally, evidence is discussed that FFA represent a crucial link between insulin resistance and beta-cell dysfunction and, as such, a reduction in elevated plasma FFA should be an important therapeutic target in obesity and type 2 diabetes.

J Clin Invest. 1994 Jun;93(6):2438-46.
Mechanisms of fatty acid-induced inhibition of glucose uptake.
Boden G, Chen X, Ruiz J, White JV, Rossetti L.
Increased plasma FFA reduce insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. The mechanisms responsible for this inhibition, however, remain uncertain. It was the aim of this study to determine whether the FFA effect was dose dependent and to investigate its mechanism. We have examined in healthy volunteers (13 male/1 female) the effects of three steady state plasma FFA levels (approximately 50, approximately 550, approximately 750 microM) on rates of glucose uptake, glycolysis (both with 3-3H-glucose), glycogen synthesis (determined with two independent methods), carbohydrate (CHO) oxidation (by indirect calorimetry), hepatic glucose output, and nonoxidative glycolysis (glycolysis minus CHO oxidation) during euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamping. Increasing FFA concentration (from approximately 50 to approximately 750 microM) decreased glucose uptake in a dose-dependent fashion (from approximately 9 to approximately 4 mg/kg per min). The decrease was caused mainly (approximately 2/3) by a reduction in glycogen synthesis and to a lesser extent (approximately 1/3) by a reduction in CHO oxidation. We have identified two independent defects in glycogen synthesis. The first consisted of an impairment of muscle glycogen synthase activity. It required high FFA concentration (approximately 750 microM), was associated with an increase in glucose-6-phosphate, and developed after 4-6 h of fat infusion. The second defect, which preceded the glycogen synthase defect, was seen at medium (approximately 550 microM) FFA concentration, was associated with a decrease in muscle glucose-6-phosphate concentration, and was probably due to a reduction in glucose transport/phosphorylation. In addition, FFA and/or glycerol increased insulin-suppressed hepatic glucose output by approximately 50%. We concluded that fatty acids caused a dose-dependent inhibition of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake (by decreasing glycogen synthesis and CHO oxidation) and that FFA and/or glycerol increased insulin-suppressed hepatic glucose output and thus caused insulin resistance at the peripheral and the hepatic level.

Trends Endocrinol Metab. 2000 Nov;11(9):351-6.
Free fatty acids and pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Bergman RN, Ader M.
Plasma free fatty acids (FFA) might mediate the insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance associated with central obesity. Central adipocytes are resistant to insulin, suggesting that FFA delivery to the liver via the portal vein is increased when visceral triglyceride (TG) stores are increased. Muscle insulin resistance might result from the ‘Randle’ mechanism, from downregulation of the insulin signaling pathway, and/or reduced access of insulin to skeletal muscle owing to changes in blood flow or insulin transport across capillary endothelium. TG storage within muscle might interfere with insulin action, but a causal relationship between myocellular lipid and glucose disposal remains to be demonstrated. Basal levels of FFA appear to be permissive for insulin secretion; however, elevated FFA have a minor effect on insulin secretion in vivo. In humans, prolonged hyperlipidemia engenders an insulin response matched to the degree of insulin resistance, leaving open the question of whether lipotoxicity of islet cells contributes to glucose intolerance and diabetes in humans. Elevated portal FFA might account for overproduction of liver glucose output with visceral adiposity. Additionally, portal FFA might reduce hepatic extraction of insulin, diminishing the necessity of increased beta-cell response to compensate for FFA-driven insulin resistance. Overall, effects of FFA can lead to several components of the insulin resistance syndrome and risk for diabetes. Reduction in FFA might be the appropriate therapy for these disorders.

J Basic Clin Physiol Pharmacol. 1998;9(2-4):205-21.
Central role of the adipocyte in insulin resistance.
Bergman RN, Mittelman SD.
Mechanisms of insulin resistance in subjects at risk for type 2 diabetes remain to be elucidated. Insulin acts slowly in vivo, but rapidly in vitro, suggesting that the pathway insulin traverses from B-cell to insulin sensitive tissue may be altered in diabetes. An important component of that pathway is transport of insulin across the capillary endothelium. Several groups have demonstrated that insulin resistance may result from reduced capillary permeability to insulin–it remains to be determined whether reduced permeability contributes to insulin resistance in any stage leading to type 2 diabetes. Interestingly, the transport of insulin across the endothelial barrier not only limits the rate of insulin to stimulate glucose uptake by skeletal muscle, but appears also to determine the rate at which insulin suppresses liver glucose output. Because the liver circulation is fenestrated, it is not possible that insulin transport into the liver is the rate determining step for suppression of liver glucose output. An alternative hypothesis was considered–that insulin is transported into an extrahepatic tissue. A “second signal” is generated by the extrahepatic tissue, the signal is released into the blood, and the signal in turn controls hepatic glucose output. Several lines of evidence suggest that the second signal is free fatty acids (FFA): 1) There is a strong correlation between FFA and liver glucose output under a variety of experimental conditions. 2) If FFA are maintained at basal concentrations during insulin administration, glucose output fails to decline. 3) If FFA are reduced independent of insulin administration, glucose output is reduced. These three points support the concept that insulin, by regulating adipocyte lipolysis, controls liver glucose production. Thus, the adipocyte is a critical mediator between insulin and liver glucose output. Evidence that FFA also suppress skeletal muscle glucose uptake and insulin secretion from the B-cell supports the overall central role of the adipocyte in the regulation of glycemia. Insulin resistance at the fat cell may be an important component of the overall regulation of glycemia because of the relationships between FFA and glucose production, glucose uptake, and insulin release. It is possible that insulin resistance at the adipocyte itself can be a major cause of the dysregulation of carbohydrate metabolism in the prediabetic state.

Prog Clin Biol Res. 1983;111:89-109.
Energy metabolism in trauma and sepsis: the role of fat.
Wolfe RR, Shaw JH, Durkot MJ.
There seems little doubt that there are signals for the increased mobilization of fat in shock, trauma, and sepsis. Whether those signals are reflected by an actual increase in mobilization is dependent on many variables including cardiovascular status. A hypothetical scheme based on our own experiments in the hyperdynamics phases of response to burn injury and to sepsis is presented in Figure 8. According to this scheme, catecholamines stimulate lipolysis in the adipose tissue, resulting in the release of glycerol and FFA into the plasma at increased rates. The glycerol is cleared by the liver and converted into glucose–a process stimulated by, among other things, glucagon. Some of the increased flux of FFA is also cleared by the liver, whereupon the fatty acids are incorporated into VLDL and released again into the plasma. The increased FFA levels also exert a dampening effect on the factors stimulating hepatic glucose production. At the periphery, plasma FFA as well as VLDL fatty acids are taken up at an increased rate. The tissues are attuned to the oxidation of fat, and as a consequence most of the energy production is derived from fat oxidation. The increased fatty acids exert an inhibitory effect on the complete oxidation of glucose, so although glucose may be taken up at an accelerated rate, the relative contribution of glucose oxidation to total energy production may fall. Rather than being completely oxidized, pyruvate is reduced to lactate and released into the plasma at an accelerated rate. The lactate then contributes to the production of glucose in the liver, completing a cyclical process called the Cori Cycle. Although all aspects of this scheme are supported by data highlighted in this paper, it certainly must be an oversimplification of the overall response of substrate metabolism to trauma and sepsis. It is presented for the purpose of highlighting the potential role of fat as a controller of the metabolic response, and to suggest that the enhanced mobilization and oxidation of fat is one of the fundamental responses to stress.

J Physiol. 2013 May 13. [Epub ahead of print]
Effect of a Sustained Reduction in Plasma Free Fatty Acid Concentration onInsulin Signaling and Inflammation in Skeletal Muscle from Human Subjects.
Liang H, Tantiwong P, Sriwijitkamol A, Shanmugasundaram K, Mohan S, Espinoza S, Dubé JJ, Defronzo RA, Musi N.
Key points

• Reducing free fatty acids in the circulation gives protection against muscle insulin resistance.

• In the present study, we investigated the mechanism by which free fatty acid reduction improves muscle insulin sensitivity.

• The antilipolytic drug acipimox reduced the plasma concentration of unsaturated and saturated fatty acids in insulin-resistant (obese and type 2 diabetic) subjects.

• The reduction in plasma free fatty acid concentration caused by acipimox led to an improvement in local inflammation and insulin signalling in skeletal muscle.

• The improvements in local inflammation and insulin signalling were more pronounced in obese type 2 diabetic subjects than obese non-diabetic individuals, suggesting that diabetic subjects are more susceptible to the toxic effect of circulating free fatty acids.

Free fatty acids (FFA) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance. Reducing plasma FFA concentration in obese and type 2 diabetic (T2DM) subjects improves insulin sensitivity. However, the molecular mechanism by which FFA reduction improves insulin sensitivity in human subjects is not fully understood. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that pharmacologic FFA reduction enhances insulin action by reducing local (muscle) inflammation, leading to improved insulin signaling. Insulin-stimulated total glucose disposal (TGD), plasma FFA species, muscle insulin signaling, IκBα protein, c-Jun phosphorylation, inflammatory gene [toll-like receptor (TLR)4 and monocyte chemotactic protein (MCP)1] expression, and ceramide and diacylglycerol (DAG) content were measured in muscle from a group of obese and T2DM subjects before and after administration of the antilipolytic drug acipimox for seven days, and results were compared to lean individuals. We found that obese and T2DM subjects had elevated saturated and unsaturated FFAs in plasma, and acipimox reduced all FFA species. Acipimox-induced reductions in plasma FFAs improved TGD and insulin signaling in obese and T2DM subjects. Acipimox increased IκBα protein [an indication of decreased IKK-nuclear factor (NF)κB signaling] in both obese and T2DM subjects, but did not affect c-Jun phosphorylation in any group. Acipimox also decreased inflammatory gene expression, although this reduction only occurred in T2DM subjects. Ceramide and DAG content did not change. To summarize, pharmacologic FFA reduction improves insulin signaling in muscle from insulin resistant subjects. This beneficial effect on insulin action could be related to a decrease in local inflammation. Notably, the improvements insulin action were more pronounced in T2DM, indicating that these subjects are more susceptible to the toxic effect of FFAs.

Diabetes. 2014 Aug;63(8):2812-20. doi: 10.2337/db13-1130. Epub 2013 Dec 18.
Chronic reduction of plasma free fatty acid improves mitochondrial function and whole-body insulin sensitivity in obese and type 2 diabetic individuals.
Daniele G1, Eldor R1, Merovci A1, Clarke GD1, Xiong J1, Tripathy D1, Taranova A1, Abdul-Ghani M1, DeFronzo RA2.
Insulin resistance and dysregulation of free fatty acid (FFA) metabolism are core defects in type 2 diabetic (T2DM) and obese normal glucose tolerant (NGT) individuals. Impaired muscle mitochondrial function (reduced ATP synthesis) also has been described in insulin-resistant T2DM and obese subjects. We examined whether reduction in plasma FFA concentration with acipimox improved ATP synthesis rate and altered reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Eleven NGT obese and 11 T2DM subjects received 1) OGTT, 2) euglycemic insulin clamp with muscle biopsy, and 3) (1)H-magnetic resonance spectroscopy of tibialis anterior muscle before and after acipimox (250 mg every 6 h for 12 days). ATP synthesis rate and ROS generation were measured in mitochondria isolated from muscle tissue ex vivo with chemoluminescence and fluorescence techniques, respectively. Acipimox 1) markedly reduced the fasting plasma FFA concentration and enhanced suppression of plasma FFA during oral glucose tolerance tests and insulin clamp in obese NGT and T2DM subjects and 2) enhanced insulin-mediated muscle glucose disposal and suppression of hepatic glucose production. The improvement in insulin sensitivity was closely correlated with the decrease in plasma FFA in obese NGT (r = 0.81) and T2DM (r = 0.76) subjects (both P < 0.001). Mitochondrial ATP synthesis rate increased by >50% in both obese NGT and T2DM subjects and was strongly correlated with the decrease in plasma FFA and increase in insulin-mediated glucose disposal (both r > 0.70, P < 0.001). Production of ROS did not change after acipimox. Reduction in plasma FFA in obese NGT and T2DM individuals improves mitochondrial ATP synthesis rate, indicating that the mitochondrial defect in insulin-resistant individuals is, at least in part, reversible.

Diabetes August 2014 vol. 63 no. 8 2611-2612
Improved Mitochondrial Function Is Linked With Improved Insulin Sensitivity Through Reductions in FFA
Bret H. Goodpaster⇑ and Paul M. Coen
“These persuasive data support a link between FFA reduction and improved insulin sensitivity and mitochondrial ATP production. While not proving causality, this study makes an important contribution to our knowledge regarding the potential origins of IR; one that also has therapeutic implications”

PLoS One. 2013 Oct 7;8(10):e77280. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0077280. eCollection 2013.
Rapid Inhibition of Pyruvate Dehydrogenase: An Initiating Event in High Dietary Fat-Induced Loss of Metabolic Flexibility in the Heart
Clair Crewe, Michael Kinter, Luke I. Szweda
Cardiac function depends on the ability to switch between fatty acid and glucose oxidation for energy production in response to changes in substrate availability and energetic stress. In obese and diabetic individuals, increased reliance on fatty acids and reduced metabolic flexibility are thought to contribute to the development of cardiovascular disease. Mechanisms by which cardiac mitochondria contribute to diet-induced metabolic inflexibility were investigated. Mice were fed a high fat or low fat diet for 1 d, 1 wk, and 20 wk. Cardiac mitochondria isolated from mice fed a high fat diet displayed a diminished ability to utilize the glycolytically derived substrate pyruvate. This response was rapid, occurring within the first day on the diet, and persisted for up to 20 wk. A selective increase in the expression of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 and inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase are responsible for the rapid suppression of pyruvate utilization. An important consequence is that pyruvate dehydrogenase is sensitized to inhibition when mitochondria respire in the presence of fatty acids. Additionally, increased expression of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 preceded any observed diet-induced reductions in the levels of glucose transporter type 4 and glycolytic enzymes and, as judged by Akt phosphorylation, insulin signaling. Importantly, diminished insulin signaling evident at 1 wk on the high fat diet did not occur in pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 knockout mice. Dietary intervention leads to a rapid decline in pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 levels and recovery of pyruvate dehydrogenase activity indicating an additional form of regulation. Finally, an overnight fast elicits a metabolic response similar to that induced by high dietary fat obscuring diet-induced metabolic changes. Thus, our data indicate that diet-induced inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase may be an initiating event in decreased oxidation of glucose and increased reliance of the heart on fatty acids for energy production.

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Hypertension and Calcium Deficiency

Also see:
Calcium Paradox
Blood Pressure Management with Calcium & Dairy
Calcium to Phosphorus Ratio, PTH, and Bone Health

Calcium deficiency, not sodium excess, is an overlooked link in hypertension (high blood pressure) likely due to overstimulation of parathyroid hormone (PTH). Don’t forget your dairy products and egg shells.

Hypertension 1980 Mar-Apr;2(2):162-8.
Enhanced parathyroid function in essential hypertension: a homeostatic response to a urinary calcium leak.
McCarron DA, Pingree PA, Rubin RJ, Gaucher SM, Molitch M, Krutzik S.
Recent reports, though, suggest that increased parathyroid gland function may be one of the more common endocrine disturbances associated with hypertension. Compared to a second age- and sex-matched normotensive population, the hypertensives demonstrated a significant (p less than 0.005) relative hypercalciuria. For any level of urinary sodium, hypertensives excreted more calcium. These preliminary data suggest that parathyroid gland function may be enhanced in essential hypertension.

Am J Med 1987 Jan 26;82(1B):27-33.
The calcium paradox of essential hypertension.
McCarron DA, Morris CD, Bukoski R.
Three disparate observations–that calcium mediates vascular smooth muscle contraction, that calcium channel blockers lower blood pressure, and that increased dietary calcium intake can also ameliorate hypertension–constitute somewhat of a paradox. This evidence, and the paradoxical therapeutic efficacy of both calcium channel blockers and supplemental dietary calcium, can be integrated into a single theoretic construct.

Science. 1984 Jun 29;224(4656):1392-8.
Blood pressure and nutrient intake in the United States.
McCarron DA, Morris CD, Henry HJ, Stanton JL.
A data base of the National Center for Health Statistics, Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I (HANES I), was used to perform a computer-assisted, comprehensive analysis of the relation of 17 nutrients to the blood pressure profile of adult Americans. Subjects were 10,372 individuals, 18 to 74 years of age, who denied a history of hypertension and intentional modification of their diet. Significant decreases in the consumption of calcium, potassium, vitamin A, and vitamin C were identified as the nutritional factors that distinguished hypertensive from normotensive subjects. Lower calcium intake was the most consistent factor in hypertensive individuals. Across the population, higher intakes of calcium, potassium, and sodium were associated with lower mean systolic blood pressure and lower absolute risk of hypertension. Increments of dietary calcium were also negatively correlated with body mass. Even though these correlations cannot be accepted as proof of causation, they have implications for future studies of the association of nutritional factors and dietary patterns with hypertension in America.

Am J Hypertens 1995 Oct;8(10 Pt 1):957-64.
Regulation of parathyroid hormone and vitamin D in essential hypertension.
Young EW, Morris CD, Holcomb S, McMillan G, McCarron DA.
The maximal stimulated PTH level was significantly higher in hypertensive than normotensive subjects in the absence of measured differences in serum ionized calcium concentration, serum 1,25(OH)2-vitamin D concentration, and creatinine clearance.

Hypertension 1986 Jun;8(6):497-505.
Effects of calcium infusion on blood pressure in hypertensive and normotensive humans.
Ellison DH, Shneidman R, Morris C, McCarron DA.
Together, these data provide evidence for interactions between dietary sodium intake and the cardiovascular response to calcium. They confirm that hypertensive subjects exhibit enhanced parathyroid gland function even when dietary factors are controlled, and they suggest that these subjects are more sensitive to the cardiovascular effects of short-term calcium infusion.

Hypertension. 2000 May;35(5):1154-9.
Relation between low calcium intake, parathyroid hormone, and blood pressure.
Jorde R, Sundsfjord J, Haug E, Bonaa KH.
In a population health survey in 1995, serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) was measured in 1113 subjects, aged 30 to 79 years, and was found to be elevated (>6.9 pmol/L) in 118 subjects. In 1998, this group and 131 subjects with normal PTH levels were invited for reexamination, and 82 and 90 subjects from each respective group attended the follow-up. At the follow-up, 72 subjects had elevated and 100 had normal serum PTH levels. Those with elevated serum PTH levels (8 subjects with hyperparathyroidism were excluded) had significantly lower serum calcium levels and intake of calcium than those with normal PTH (2.24+/-0.09 and 2.29+/-0.10 mmol/L [mean+/-SD] and 400.3+/-227.3 and 592.1+/-459.6 mg/d, respectively; P<0.01). Serum levels or intake of vitamin D did not differ between the 2 groups. Subjects with elevated PTH in both 1995 and 1998 had significantly lower bone mineral content and bone mineral density in the lumbar spine than did those with persistently normal PTH levels (P<0.05). In the females, but not in the males, the systolic and diastolic blood pressures were significantly higher in those with elevated serum PTH (158.0+/-27.5 versus 141.5+/-19.2 mm Hg and 90. 5+/-13.6 versus 82.6+/-8.6 mm Hg, respectively; P<0.01). This difference was even more pronounced when those with persistently elevated PTH were considered separately. In conclusion, reduced intake of calcium is frequently associated with high levels of serum PTH. This is associated with moderately reduced bone mineral content and bone mineral density in the lumbar spine. In women, high levels of serum PTH are also associated with markedly increased blood pressure.

J Hypertens. 2005 Sep;23(9):1639-44.
Serum parathyroid hormone as a predictor of increase in systolic blood pressure in men.
Jorde R, Svartberg J, Sundsfjord J.
BACKGROUND:
In cross-sectional studies there appears to be a link between calcium metabolism and blood pressure, and most studies have found a positive association between serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) and hypertension.
OBJECTIVE:
To determine the prognostic value of serum PTH regarding a future increase in blood pressure.
DESIGN:
A prospective cohort study.
SUBJECTS:
A total of 1784 individuals who had measurements of PTH in serum samples from both the fourth (1994) and fifth (2001) Tromsø studies, who did not use blood pressure medication during the observation period, and had serum calcium less than 2.61 mmol/l, were included.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE:
Delta blood pressure (blood pressure from 2001 minus blood pressure from 1994).
RESULTS:
The mean delta systolic blood pressure in the men and women during these 7 years was 5.8 and 8.1 mmHg, respectively. In a sex-specific linear regression model correcting for age, body mass index (BMI), and smoking status, serum PTH from 1994 was a significant predictor of delta systolic blood pressure in men (P < 0.01), but not in women. The difference in delta systolic blood pressure between those in the highest and those in the lowest PTH quartile was 3.5 mmHg. Similarly, delta serum PTH (serum PTH from 2001 minus serum PTH from 1994) was a significant predictor of delta systolic blood pressure in men (P < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS:
Although these findings do not prove a causal relationship between PTH and blood pressure, it adds to the growing number of indications that PTH is involved in the development of hypertension.

Am J Hypertens. 1990 Aug;3(8 Pt 2):161S-166S.
Calcium regulating hormones in essential hypertension. Importance of gender.
Young EW, McCarron DA, Morris CD.
Alterations of calcium metabolism have been described in human essential hypertension and experimental hypertension. We investigated the interrelationship of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and 1,25(OH)2-vitamin D (1,25(OH)2D) in patients with untreated essential hypertension as compared to normotensive controls. The hypertensive subjects (n = 75; 43 men, 32 women) had a mean blood pressure of 138 +/- 8/95 +/- 5 mm Hg as compared with 120 +/- 11/80 +/- 8 in the normotensive group (n = 40; 22 men, 18 women). Serum PTH was measured with an intact molecule immunochemiluminometric assay and 1,25(OH)2D was measured with radioimmunoassay after HPLC separation. Hypertensive men had PTH levels that were 36% higher than normotensive men (5.3 +/- 2.9 v 3.9 +/- 0.8 pmol/L, P = .005). When blood pressure was analyzed as a continuous variable, there was a direct correlation between it and serum PTH in men (r = .31, P = .004). In women, by contrast, there was no difference in serum PTH between hypertensive and normotensive subjects and no relationship between blood pressure and the serum PTH concentration. Blood pressure was inversely correlated with serum phosphorus levels in both sexes (r = -0.20, P = .04). In men, the elevated serum PTH levels and depressed serum phosphorus levels would have predicted that serum 1,25(OH)2D would be higher in the hypertensive subjects. However, that was not observed, as serum 1,25(OH)2D was slightly lower in hypertensive (38.3 +/- 15.2 pg/mL) than normotensive men (42.7 +/- 11.3, P = .21).

Am J Hypertens. 1995 Oct;8(10 Pt 1):957-64.
Regulation of parathyroid hormone and vitamin D in essential hypertension.
Young EW, Morris CD, Holcomb S, McMillan G, McCarron DA.
Patients with essential hypertension have been reported to have a higher serum concentration of parathyroid hormone (PTH) than normotensive individuals although this finding is not universal among studies. To further characterize the status of the calcium regulating hormones in essential hypertension, we measured the parathyroid gland response to acute EDTA-induced hypocalcemia and the renal response of 1,25(OH)2-vitamin D to dietary calcium deprivation in 16 hypertensive (H) and 15 normotensive (N) men. The average mean arterial blood pressure once all antihypertensive medications were discontinued was 108 +/- 7 mm Hg for the hypertensive group and 89 +/- 4 mm Hg for the normotensive group (P < .01). There were no group differences in baseline serum concentrations of ionized calcium, creatinine, intact PTH, and 1,25(OH)2-vitamin D, urinary calcium excretion, and creatinine clearance. After a 1-h infusion of EDTA at 12.5 mg/kg/h, the serum concentration of ionized calcium fell (H: 1.25 +/- .03 to 1.17 +/- .04 mmol/L, N: 1.26 +/- .04 to 1.18 +/- .04 mmol/L, P = NS) and PTH increased (H: 36 +/- 9 to 91 +/- 30 pg/mL, N: 40 +/- 14 to 85 +/- 28 pg/mL, P = NS). With an additional hour of EDTA at a dose of 25 mg/kg/h, serum ionized calcium concentration fell further (H: 1.01 +/- .05 mmol/L, N: 1.03 +/- .06 mmol/L, P = NS) and PTH increased to 150 +/- 58 pg/ml in patients and 130 +/- 32 pg/ml in controls (P < .001). The response suggested an increased maximal parathyroid gland secretory capacity in the hypertensive patients relative to the controls. There was no group difference in the serum concentration of 1,25(OH)2-vitamin D at baseline (H: 32 +/- 6 pg/ml, N: 32 +/- 8 pg/ml, P < .90) and following dietary calcium deprivation for three days (H 50 +/- 12, N 48 +/- 14 P < 0.76). The maximal stimulated PTH level was significantly higher in hypertensive than normotensive subjects in the absence of measured differences in serum ionized calcium concentration, serum 1,25(OH)2-vitamin D concentration, and creatinine clearance. These findings suggest an intrinsic alteration of PTH regulation in patients with essential hypertension, manifest as increased parathyroid gland secretory capacity.

Blood Press. 1996 Mar;5(2):121-7.
Effect of low dietary calcium intake on blood pressure and pressure natriuresis response in rats: a possible role of the renin-angiotensin system.
Yuasa S, Sumikura T, Yura T, Takahashi N, Shoji T, Uchida K, Fujioka H, Miki S, Matsuo H, Takamitsu Y.
Dietary Ca is an important modulator of blood pressure in humans and rats. Since the kidney plays a key role in the pathogenesis of hypertension, the effects of a low Ca diet (0.01% Ca) on blood pressure and pressure natriuresis response were studied in normotensive Sprague-Dawley rats. In addition, a possible role of the renin-angiotensin system in the development of hypertension and an altered pressure natriuresis response resulting from low dietary Ca intake was examined. In the low Ca diet group, systolic blood pressure measured by the tail-cuff method was significantly higher than in the normal Ca diet group (1,1% Ca) 1 week after the diet (1 13.0 +/- 7.1 vs. 105.0 +/- 9.5mmHg, p < 0.05). After 4 weeks, the hypertension was more pronounced. Low dietary Ca intake significantly inhibited the water and sodium excretory responses to acute elevation of renal perfusion pressure by tightening an infrarenal aortic constriction. Treatment with an inhibitor of angiotensin-converting enzyme, captopril (30 mg/kg/day), completely abolished the elevation of blood pressure and attenuated the reduced pressure natriuresis response observed in Ca-deficient rats. Although plasma renin activity was not different between the low and normal Ca diet groups after the 2-week dietary regimen, the pressor response to angiotensin II was enhanced by 30% in the low Ca diet group and there was a significant difference in the pressor response between the two groups. These results suggest a possible involvement of the renin-angiotensin system in the development of hypertension and an inhibitory effect on the pressure natriuresis response caused by low dietary Ca intake, via an enhanced sensitivity to angiotensin II.

Semin Nephrol. 1995 Nov;15(6):593-602.
Mechanisms of calcium’s effects on blood pressure.
Hatton DC, Yue Q, McCarron DA
Manipulations of dietary calcium have been repeatedly shown to alter blood pressure in animal models of human essential hypertension. Supplemental dietary calcium lowers blood pressure, whereas restricted calcium diets tend to elevate blood pressure. The mechanisms responsible have not been identified, but numerous possibilities have been proposed. Many of the proposals have attempted to relate dietary calcium to calcium metabolism in vascular smooth muscle and altered vascular tone. Other proposals have focused on neural, hormonal, and renal effects of dietary calcium. In this article, mechanisms through which elevations in extracellular calcium levels might influence intracellular calcium levels are explored. Also examined are the potential roles of calcium regulating hormones, sympathetic nervous system, and electrolyte interactions in modifying blood pressure.

J Lab Clin Med. 1989 Oct;114(4):338-48.
Calcium and hypertension.
Sowers JR, Zemel MB, Standley PR, Zemel PC.
A possible relationship between dietary calcium intake and blood pressure has been the focus of considerable recent observational and experimental research. To provide a current perspective, we have reviewed and summarized the epidemiologic data, evidence suggesting abnormalities in calcium metabolism in human hypertension, studies evaluating calcium supplementation in various hypertension populations, and data that may help elucidate possible blood pressure-lowering mechanisms of calcium supplementation. An important relationship between “calcium metabolism” and “salt-sensitivity” is emerging and appears to be providing insights into potential mechanisms that account for the antihypertensive properties of dietary calcium in certain individuals. More experimental work needs to be performed to further define the individuals with hypertension who demonstrate a blood pressure-lowering response to dietary calcium supplementation.

Science 16 July 1982: Vol. 217 no. 4556 pp. 267-269
Dietary calcium in human hypertension
DA McCarron, CD Morris, C Cole
A pilot survey was made of the dietary calcium intake of normotensive and hypertensive individuals. Compared to 44 normotensive controls, 46 subjects with essential hypertension reported significantly less daily calcium ingestion (668 +/- 55 milligrams compared to 886 +/- 89 milligrams). The intake of other nutrients, including sodium and potassium, was very similar in the two groups. The hypertensives differed from the controls primarily in their consumption of nonfluid dairy products. The data suggest that inadequate calcium intake may be a previously unrecognized factor in the development of hypertension.

J Am Coll Nutr February 1998 vol. 17 no. 1 97-98
Importance of Dietary Calcuim in Hypertension
David A. McCarron, MD
For decades dietary factors have been postulated as being important in the pathogenesis and treatment of arterial hypertension. Almost to the exclusion of other nutrients, sodium has dominated both the clinical arena and research paradigm. In recent years emphasis has also been placed on weight control and alcohol moderation as nutrition-related, life-style factors that might favorably influence blood pressure. Fifteen years ago in a paper in Science [1] we reported that in contrast to commonly held notions, a diet deficient in calcium from dairy products was the dietary pattern that predicted an elevated arterial pressure. In that study cohort there was no evidence of an impact of dietary sodium on blood pressure.

In 1984 we published a second paper in Science [2] which reported the results of an analysis of the first NHANES. Again we observed that as reported dietary calcium and potassium intake decreased, arterial pressure and the risk of being hypertensive increased. Further we reported that a diet low in dairy products and fresh fruits and vegetables were the two dietary patterns most predictive of hypertension in the United States. Besides confirming our 1982 paper, the 1984 Science paper raised the disturbing possibility that a lower sodium intake might actually be associated with an increased risk of hypertension. In spite of these intriguing findings, the extensive data base that emerged to support the calcium deficiency hypothesis [3,4], and the significant disagreement that exists among experts regarding sodium’s role in arterial pressure control [5,6], public health policy continues to emphasize sodium reduction as its principle recommendation [7,8].

Two potentially landmark studies [9,10], both funded by the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, and published in April should finally redirect our emphasis towards the dietary patterns that will benefit the millions of Americans with high blood pressure. The Trials of Hypertension Prevention II (TOHP II) [9] was the largest and longest randomized controlled trial of sodium reduction in a population at high risk of developing hypertension. Over the 48 months of observation there was no evidence that the primary end-point, diastolic blood pressure, was improved by consumption of a reduced sodium chloride diet. Systolic blood pressure was lowered by 0.6 mm Hg, but the reduction in blood pressure could not be related to the level of dietary sodium restriction. Furthermore, there was little evidence that reduced dietary sodium lowers the incidence of new cases of hypertension. As Dr. Pickering noted in his accompanying editorial [11], it is time to move on from recommending sodium restriction as a population-wide strategy to reduce the prevalence of hypertension.

The second study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, was the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) [10]. In stark contrast to the results in TOHP II, DASH demonstrated a significantly beneficial effect of a diet replete in low fat dairy products and fruits and vegetables on systolic (5 to 6 mm Hg) and diastolic (2 to 3 mm Hg) blood pressure in the general population. Weight and sodium intake were held constant and thus were not a factor in the blood pressure reductions observed. In the DASH participants with mild hypertension, the reductions were comparable (systolic 11 to 12 mm Hg and diastolic 5 to 6 mm Hg reductions) to those observed with monotherapy (single drug) regimens. The DASH authors also noted that their results were generalizable to the entire US population since the blood pressure reductions did not stratify based upon age, gender, weight or race.

The DASH diet was also reflective of current nutritional recommendations to reduce the risk of dyslipidemia, osteoporosis, and cancer. Thus, we have compelling additional reasons to promote dietary patterns that emphasize low fat dairy products and fruits and vegetables as the dietary pattern that will most likely reduce the risk of hypertensive heart disease and its attendant complications: coronary heart disease and stroke. It is imperative that the nutrition community—researchers, practitioners, and leaders—accept the challenge of focusing of our preventive and public health programs on the nutritional factors that are most likely to benefit us all [12].

J Am Coll Nutr October 1999 vol. 18 no. suppl 5398S-405S
Finding Consensus in the Dietary Calcium-Blood Pressure Debate
David A. McCarron, MD and Molly E. Reusser, BA
No single study or avenue of investigation can resolve the scientific controversies that entangle efforts to determine the effects of specific nutrients on medical conditions. To reach consensus in this area requires a substantial body of plausible, reproducible and consistent data from various investigative approaches—such as the data that now exist regarding the relationship between dietary calcium and blood pressure. In this paper we describe the plethora of epidemiological and clinical studies and analyses that have been published in the last two years and which cumulatively reveal the consistency of the available data regarding the influence of dietary calcium on blood pressure regulation. Nearly 20 years of investigation in this area has culminated in remarkable and compelling agreement in the data, confirming the need for and benefit of regular consumption of the recommended daily levels of dietary calcium.

Key teaching points:
After nearly 20 years of controversy, the relationship between dietary calcium and blood pressure is being confirmed by a large body of recently published data consistently reporting a blood pressure-lowering effect of adequate calcium intake.

• Meta-analyses of 23 observational studies and of 42 randomized controlled trials have identified statistically significant reductions in hypertension risk and in blood pressure levels.

The impact of calcium on blood pressure appears to be greatest in persons consuming regularly low levels of dietary calcium, the primary source of which is dairy products.

The health benefits of adequate calcium, including lower risk of osteoporosis and colon cancer as well as hypertension, can be realized by simply consuming the recommended dietary calcium levels for an individual’s age and gender (1000 to 1500 mg/day).

J Bone Miner Metab (2000) 18:234–236.
Calcium paradox: consequences of calcium deficiency manifested by a wide variety of diseases.
Takuo Fujita
Calcium deficiency is a global problem, especially in the aging population. Among various nutrients, calcium is one of the few that is still deficient in industrialized countries such as Japan and many Western countries. Calcium deficiency is readily connected with osteoporosis, which is a decrease of bone calcium content. Less well known is the calcium outflow from bone that occurs to prevent decrease of blood calcium in calcium deficiency caused by the parathyroid hormone, with consequent calcium overflow into soft tissues and the intracellular compartment. Such intracellular paradoxical Ca overload as a consequence of nutritional calcium deficiency may give rise to a number of diseases common in old age: hypertension, arteriosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, neurodegenerative diseases, malignancy, and degenerative joint disease.

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Protective Cascara Sagrada and Emodin

Also see:
Ray Peat, PhD on the Benefits of the Raw Carrot
Protective Bamboo Shoots
The effect of raw carrot on serum lipids and colon function
Endotoxin: Poisoning from the Inside Out
Protection from Endotoxin
Bowel Toxins Accelerate Aging

Cascara
Dried aged bark of a buckthorn, Frangula purshiana (FRANGULA), that contains the anthraquinone EMODIN and cascarosides. It is used as a laxative (CATHARTICS).
Year introduced: 1991(1975)

Cascara, energy, cancer and the FDA’s laxative abuse by Ray Peat, PhD

Aged Cascara Sagrada Powder from Italy

Aged Cascara Sagrada Powder from Italy

Emodin has an opposing effect, increasing the metabolic rate. It increases mitochondrial oxygen consumption and ATP synthesis, while decreasing oxidative damage. (Du and Ko, 2005, 2006; Huang, et al., 1995). -Ray Peat, PhD

Life Sci. 2005 Oct 14;77(22):2770-82.
Effects of emodin treatment on mitochondrial ATP generation capacity and antioxidant components as well as susceptibility to ischemia-reperfusion injury in rat hearts: single versus multiple doses and gender difference.
Du Y, Ko KM.
Effects of emodin (EMD) treatment on mitochondrial ATP generation capacity and antioxidant components as well as susceptibility to ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury were examined in male and female rat hearts. Isolated-perfused hearts prepared from female rats were less susceptible to I-R injury than those of male rats. I-R caused significant decreases in ATP generation capacity and reduced glutathione (GSH) and alpha-tocopherol (alpha-TOC) levels as well as glutathione reductase, Se-glutathione peroxidase and Mn-superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities. The lower susceptibility of female hearts to myocardial I-R injury was associated with higher levels of GSH and alpha-TOC as well as activity of SOD than those of male hearts. EMD treatment at 3 daily doses (0.6 or 1.2 mmol/kg) could enhance myocardial mitochondrial ATP generation capacity and antioxidant components in both male and female rat hearts, but it only significantly protected against I-R injury in female hearts. Treatment with a single dose of EMD invariably enhanced mitochondrial antioxidant components and protected against I-R injury in both male and female hearts. The gender-dependent effect of EMD treatment at multiple doses may be related to the differential antioxidant response in the myocardium and/or induction of drug metabolizing enzymes in the liver.

Mol Cell Biochem. 2006 Aug;288(1-2):135-42. Epub 2006 Apr 1.
Effects of pharmacological preconditioning by emodin/oleanolic acid treatment and/or ischemic preconditioning on mitochondrial antioxidant components as well as the susceptibility to ischemia-reperfusion injury in rat hearts.
Du Y, Ko KM.
Using an ex vivo rat heart model of ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury, we examined the effect of pharmacological preconditioning by chronic treatment with emodin (EMD)/oleanolic acid (OA) at low dose (25 micromol/kg/day x 15) and/or ischemic preconditioning (IPC) (4 cycles of 5 min ischemia followed by 5 min of reperfusion) on myocardial I-R injury. The results indicated that EMD/OA pretreatment, IPC, or their combinations (EMD+IPC and OA+IPC) protected against myocardial I-R injury, as assessed by lactate dehydrogenase leakage and contractile force recovery. The cardioprotection was associated with a differential enhancement in mitochondrial antioxidant components. The combined EMD/OA and IPC pretreatment produced cardioprotective action in a semi-additive manner. This suggested that EMD/OA pretreatment and IPC protected against myocardial I-R injury via a similar but not identical biochemical mechanism.

J Nat Prod. 1995 Sep;58(9):1365-71.
Effect of anthraquinone derivatives on lipid peroxidation in rat heart mitochondria: structure-activity relationship.
Huang SS, Yeh SF, Hong CY.
Lipid peroxidation was induced in rat heart mitochondria with FeSO4 and the inhibitory effects of various anthraquinone derivatives were compared. Oxygen consumption and malondialdehyde formation were used to quantitate the amount of lipid peroxidation. Emodin [2], alizarin [13], and alizarin complexone [14] significantly inhibited lipid peroxidation; their potency as inhibitors of lipid peroxidation was higher than that of alpha-tocopherol. Structure-activity analysis showed that two hydroxyl groups arranged in either the ortho- or meta-position in the C ring of the anthraquinone nucleus are required for such derivatives to inhibit lipid peroxidation. The diphenyl-p-picrylhydrazyl test showed that alizarin [13] and alizarin complexone [14] are free-radical scavengers while emodin [2] is not. The mechanism for emodin [2] to inhibit lipid peroxidation is most likely due to inhibition on the propagation of lipid peroxyl radicals in the mitochondrial membrane.

Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi. 2010 Dec;35(24):3348-53.
[Emodin enhances antitumor effect of gemcitabine in model of SW1990 cell xenograft on athymic mouse].
[Article in Chinese]
Wei W, Guo Y, Chen H, Liu D, Guo H, Lin S.
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the enhanced effect of gemcitabine by emodin and the possible mechanisms of the enhancement.
METHOD:
Based on the model of SW1990 cell xenograft on athymic mouse, the mice were randomized to four groups with intraperitoneal (IP) injections of different drugs: group N (injecting 0.9% sodium chloride), group E (emodin, 40 mg x kg(-1)), group G (gemcitabine, 125 mg x kg(-1)), and group E + G (emodin 40 mg x kg(-1) and gemcitabine 80 mg x kg(-1) in combination). The tumor volume, tumor weight and body weight of mice were measured during the drug therapy. The mice were sacrificed one week after last injection of drug. Tunel assay were used used to detect the apoptosis of tumor cells. And immunohistochemistry (IHC) and Western blot (WB) were used to detect the variance of the apoptosis relative protein expression of Bax, Bcl-2, and Cytochrome C .
RESULT:
One week after the last administration, the mean tumor volume and tumor weight in group E + G were significantly decreased compared to the other groups. Tunel assay showed group E + G presented apparently more apoptosis than the other groups. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) and Western blot (WB) analysis showed the expression of Cytochrome C in cytoplasmin and Bax in group E + G was apparently upregulated while the expression of Bcl-2 was apparently downregulated compared to the other groups. As a result, Bcl-2/Bax ratio was significantly decreased in group E + G.
CONCLUSION:
Emodin can significantly improve the antitumor effect of gemcitabine on transplanted tumor of SW1990 cell line through apparently enhancing the tumor cell apoptosis by gemcitabine. Downregulation of Bcl-2/Bax ratio and promoting release of Cytochrome C from mitochondria is possibly one of the mechanisms of the augmented apoptosis.

Med Res Rev. 2007 Sep;27(5):591-608.
Molecular mechanism of emodin action: transition from laxative ingredient to an antitumor agent.
Srinivas G, Babykutty S, Sathiadevan PP, Srinivas P.
Anthraquinones represent a large family of compounds having diverse biological properties. Emodin (1,3,8-trihydroxy-6-methylanthraquinone) is a naturally occurring anthraquinone present in the roots and barks of numerous plants, molds, and lichens, and an active ingredient of various Chinese herbs. Earlier studies have documented mutagenic/genotoxic effects of emodin, mainly in bacterial system. Emodin, first assigned to be a specific inhibitor of the protein tyrosine kinase p65lck, has now a number of cellular targets interacting with it. Its inhibitory effect on mammalian cell cycle modulation in specific oncogene overexpressed cells formed the basis of using this compound as an anticancer agent. Identification of apoptosis as a mechanism of elimination of cells treated with cytotoxic agents initiated new studies deciphering the mechanism of apoptosis induced by emodin. At present, its role in combination chemotherapy with standard drugs to reduce toxicity and to enhance efficacy is pursued vigorously. Its additional inhibitory effects on angiogenic and metastasis regulatory processes make emodin a sensible candidate as a specific blocker of tumor-associated events. Additionally, because of its quinone structure, emodin may interfere with electron transport process and in altering cellular redox status, which may account for its cytotoxic properties in different systems. However, there is no documentation available which reviews the biological activities of emodin, in particular, its growth inhibitory effects. This review is an attempt to analyze the biological properties of emodin, a molecule offering a broad therapeutic window, which in future may become a member of anticancer armamentarium.

Cancer Res. 1995 Sep 1;55(17):3890-6.
Suppressed transformation and induced differentiation of HER-2/neu-overexpressing breast cancer cells by emodin.
Zhang L, Chang CJ, Bacus SS, Hung MC.
The amplification and overexpression of the HER-2/neu proto-oncogene, which encodes the tyrosine kinase receptor p185neu, have been observed frequently in tumors from human breast cancer patients and are correlated with poor prognosis. To explore the potential of chemotherapy directed at the tyrosine kinase of p185neu, we have found that emodin (3-methyl-1,6,8-trihydroxyanthraquinone), a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, suppresses autophosphorylation and transphosphorylation activities of HER-2/neu tyrosine kinase, resulting in tyrosine hypophosphorylation of p185neu in HER-2/neu-overexpressing breast cancer cells. Emodin, at a 40-microM concentration, which repressed tyrosine kinase of p185neu, efficiently inhibited both anchorage-dependent and anchorage-independent growth of HER-2/neu-overexpressing breast cancer cells. However, the inhibition was much less effective for those cells expressing basal levels of p185neu under the same conditions. Emodin also induced differentiation of HER-2/neu-overexpressing breast cancer cells by exhibiting a morphological maturation property of large lacy nuclei surrounded by sizable flat cytoplasm and by showing a measurable production of large lipid droplets, which is a marker of mature breast cells. Therefore, our results indicate that emodin inhibits HER-2/neu tyrosine kinase activity and preferentially suppresses growth and induces differentiation of HER-2/neu-overexpressing cancer cells. These results may have chemotherapeutic implications for using emodin to target HER-2/neu-overexpressing cancer cells.

Oncogene. 1998 Jun 4;16(22):2855-63.
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors, emodin and its derivative repress HER-2/neu-induced cellular transformation and metastasis-associated properties.
Zhang L, Lau YK, Xi L, Hong RL, Kim DS, Chen CF, Hortobagyi GN, Chang C, Hung
We have previously shown that emodin suppresses tyrosine kinase activity of HER-2/neu-encoded p185neu receptor tyrosine kinase. In this study, we examine the relationship between the chemical structure and the activity of emodin and nine derivatives, and identified that one methyl, one hydroxy, and one carbonyl functional groups are critical for the biological activities of emodin. We also found that one of the derivatives 10-(4-acetamidobenzylidene)-9-anthrone (DK-V-47) is more effective than emodin in repressing the tyrosine phosphorylation of p185neu and in inhibiting the proliferation and transformation of HER-2/neu-overexpressing human breast cancer cells. Using mutation-activated HER-2/neu transformed 3T3 cells, we also investigated whether emodin and DK-V-47 can inhibit malignant transformation induced solely by the HER-2/neu oncogene. We found that DK-V-47 is more potent than emodin in suppressing transformation phenotypes of activated HER-2/neu transformed 3T3 cells including anchorage-dependent and -independent growth, metastasis-associated properties. These results clearly indicate that the inhibition of p185neu tyrosine kinase by both emodin and DK-V-47 is capable of suppressing the HER-2/neu associated transformed phenotypes including the ability to induce metastatic potential. Our results also support the chemotherapeutic implications of the use of either emodin or DK-V-47 to target HER-2/neu-overexpressing cancer cells.

Mutat Res. 1995 Jul;329(2):205-12.
Emodin inhibits the mutagenicity and DNA adducts induced by 1-nitropyrene.
Su HY, Cherng SH, Chen CC, Lee H.
Polygonum cuspidatum S. (PC) is frequently used as a laxative and an anticancer drug in Chinese medicine. The inhibitory effect of this herb and its component, emodin, on the direct-acting mutagenicity of 1-nitropyrene (1-NP) was examined using the Ames/microsomal test with Salmonella typhimurium TA98 and the genotoxicity of 1-NP was evaluated using the SOS chromotest with E. coli PQ37. Emodin and water extracts of PC markedly decreased the mutagenicity of 1-NP in a dose-dependent manner in both assay systems. Furthermore, emodin and the extracts of PC significantly inhibited the formation of 1-NP DNA adducts in S. typhimurium TA98 in the 32P-postlabeling study. The results suggest that PC extracts and emodin act as blocking and/or suppressing agents to reduce the direct-acting mutagenicity of 1-NP.

Biochem Cell Biol. 2010 Aug;88(4):767-74.
Apoptosis induced by emodin is associated with alterations of intracellular acidification and reactive oxygen species in EC-109 cells.
Wang QJ, Cai XB, Liu MH, Hu H, Tan XJ, Jing XB.
Emodin (1,3,8-trihydroxy-6-methylanthraquinone), a natural anthraquinone derivative found in several herbal medicines, is highly active in suppressing the proliferation of various tumor cells such as breast, hepatocellular, and lung cancer cells under in vitro conditions. The mechanism of emodin-induced apoptosis in esophagus carcinoma cells, EC-109, is not completely understood. In this study, EC-109 cells treated with emodin underwent rapid apoptosis as judged by morphological changes and flow cytometry analysis. The addition of emodin to EC-109 cells led to the inhibition of growth in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Fluorescence measurements of cells indicated that the intracellular pH (pHi) decreased significantly by 0.47-0.78 units. The results obtained from flow cytometry suggested that bursts of reactive oxygen species took place after the application of emodin. The present study indicates that emodin may be a strong anticancer drug against esophagus cancer cells by causing various early events leading to growth inhibition, including the production of reactive oxygen species and decrease of pHi, which may result in cellular apoptosis.

Life Sci. 2007 Oct 13;81(17-18):1332-8. Epub 2007 Sep 19.
Emodin-mediated protection from acute myocardial infarction via inhibition of inflammation and apoptosis in local ischemic myocardium.
Wu Y, Tu X, Lin G, Xia H, Huang H, Wan J, Cheng Z, Liu M, Chen G, Zhang H, Fu J, Liu Q, Liu DX.
Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is associated with inflammation and apoptosis. Emodin plays an anti-inflammatory role in several inflammatory diseases. Recent studies have demonstrated that emodin protects against myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury. However, its mechanism underlying its effects remains unknown. In a murine model of AMI, based on ligation of the left coronary artery, administration of emodin reduced myocardial infarct size (MIS) in a dose-dependent manner. Emodin significantly suppressed TNF-alpha expression and NF-kappaB activation in the local myocardial infarction area. Treatment with emodin inhibited myocardial cell apoptosis by inhibiting caspase-3 activation. Therefore, these studies demonstrate that emodin protects against myocardial cell injury via suppression of local inflammation and apoptosis.

Zhonghua Gan Zang Bing Za Zhi. 2001 Aug;9(4):235-6.
[Effects of emodin on hepatic fibrosis in rats].
[Article in Chinese]
Zhan Y, Wei H, Wang Z, Huang X, Xu Q, Li D, Lu H.
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the effect of emodin on hepatic fibrosis in rats and study its possible mechanism.
METHODS:
The rat hepatic fibrotic model was induced by the subcutaneous injection of 40% CCl(4) (twice a week for 6 weeks). The fibrotic rats were treated with low-dose, mediate-dose and high-dose emodin (20, 40 and 80 mg/kg body weight, once a day for 42 days). Liver function, serum hyaluronic acid, laminin, and liver hydroxyproline were determined, Histopathological changes were examined by optical microscopy. The expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA) in liver tissue were detected by immunohistochemical techniques.
RESULTS:
Compared with model group, it revealed that in emodin-treated rats: (1) Liver functions was improved, alanine transaminase (ALT) and alkaline phosphatase (AKP) obviously reduced (P<0.05 or <0.01), total protein (TP) and albumin (ALB) significantly increased (P<0.05 or <0.01). (2) Serum hyaluronic acid and laminin markedly reduced (P<0.05 or <0.01). (3) Liver hydroxyproline were significantly decreased (P<0.05 or <0.01). (4) The degrees of fibrosis were reduced (P<0.05). (5) The expression of alpha-SMA in liver tissue were ameliorated.
CONCLUSIONS:
Emodin has an effect on hepatic fibrosis in rats. The effect may be related to slowing hepatocyte injury and inhibiting liver alpha-SMA expressions.

Br J Pharmacol. 2010 Sep;161(1):113-26.
Emodin, a natural product, selectively inhibits 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 and ameliorates metabolic disorder in diet-induced obese mice.
Feng Y, Huang SL, Dou W, Zhang S, Chen JH, Shen Y, Shen JH, Leng Y.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:
11beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11beta-HSD1) is an attractive therapeutic target of type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Emodin, a natural product and active ingredient of various Chinese herbs, has been demonstrated to possess multiple biological activities. Here, we investigated the effects of emodin on 11beta-HSD1 and its ability to ameliorate metabolic disorders in diet-induced obese (DIO) mice.
EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH:
Scintillation proximity assay was performed to evaluate inhibition of emodin against recombinant human and mouse 11beta-HSDs. The ability of emodin to inhibit prednisone- or dexamethasone-induced insulin resistance was investigated in C57BL/6J mice and its effect on metabolic abnormalities was observed in DIO mice.
KEY RESULTS:
Emodin is a potent and selective 11beta-HSD1 inhibitor with the IC(50) of 186 and 86 nM for human and mouse 11beta-HSD1, respectively. Single oral administration of emodin inhibited 11beta-HSD1 activity of liver and fat significantly in mice. Emodin reversed prednisone-induced insulin resistance in mice, whereas it did not affect dexamethasone-induced insulin resistance, which confirmed its inhibitory effect on 11beta-HSD1 in vivo. In DIO mice, oral administration of emodin improved insulin sensitivity and lipid metabolism, and lowered blood glucose and hepatic PEPCK, and glucose-6-phosphatase mRNA.
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS:
This study demonstrated a new role for emodin as a potent and selective inhibitor of 11beta-HSD1 and its beneficial effects on metabolic disorders in DIO mice. This highlights the potential value of analogues of emodin as a new class of compounds for the treatment of metabolic syndrome or type 2 diabetes.

Chin Med Sci J. 2009 Dec;24(4):236-40.
Protective effect of emodin against lipopolysaccharides-induced corneal injury in rats.
Chen GL, Liu ZY, Wang J, Gao X, Wei LW, Liu YL.
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the effect of emodin on lipopolysaccharides (LPS)-induced corneal injury in rats.
METHODS:
Three parallel incisions on the central surface of corneal epithelium were made and LPS was applied on them to induce corneal injury in Wistar rats. All rats were randomly divided into emodin group (n=40) and keratitis group (n=40). Rats in the emodin group received subconjunctival injection of emodin and rats in the keratitis group received its vehicle 30 minutes before LPS exposure. At different time points–1, 3, 6, 12, and 24 hours after LPS exposure, the symptoms of all rats were observed and the severity of their ocular inflammation was examined with a slit lamp microscope, then 8 rats in each group were killed through cervical dislocation and their eyes were enucleated and prepared to observe pathological changes of corneal tissue under a light microscope. The activation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) under different conditions was determined by Western blot. Immunocytochemistry staining with an antibody against intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) was performed to identify positive cells in corneal tissues.
RESULTS:
The model of acute keratitis was successfully established in Wistar rats. LPS could induce a typical corneal inflammatory response, such as hyperemia, corneal edema and opacity, which were observed in model rats. Compared with keratitis group, both ocular behaviors and damages of the corneal structure were improved in emodin group. Furthermore, the activation of NF-kappaB and the expression of ICAM-1 induced by LPS were markedly inhibited in emodin group.
CONCLUSION:
Emodin can inhibit the activation of NF-kappaB and the expression of ICAM-1 induced by LPS in corneas, protect against acute corneal injury, and improve symptoms in rats.

Bioorg Med Chem Lett. 2011 Nov 9. [Epub ahead of print]
Emodin inhibits migration and invasion of DLD-1 (PRL-3) cells via inhibition of PRL-3 phosphatase activity.
Han YM, Lee SK, Jeong DG, Ryu SE, Han DC, Kim DK, Kwon BM.
Anthraquinones have been reported as phosphatase inhibitors. Therefore, anthraquinone derivatives were screened to identify a potent phosphatase inhibitor against the phosphatase of regenerating liver-3 (PRL-3). Emodin strongly inhibited phosphatase activity of PRL-3 with IC(50) values of 3.5μM and blocked PRL-3-induced tumor cell migration and invasion in a dose-dependent manner. Emodin rescued the phosphorylation of ezrin, which is a known PRL-3 substrate. The results of this study reveal that emodin is a PRL-3 inhibitor and a good lead molecule for obtaining a selective PRL-3 inhibitor.

Fundam Clin Pharmacol. 2011 Nov 2. doi: 10.1111/j.1472-8206.2011.01003.x. [Epub ahead of print]
Abrogation of cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity by emodin in rats.
Ali BH, Al-Salam S, Al Husseini IS, Al-Lawati I, Waly M, Yasin J, Fahim M, Nemmar A.
Nephrotoxicity of the anticancer drug cisplatin (CP) involves the generation of reactive oxygen species in renal cortex, and emodin (a rhubarb anthraquinone) has strong antioxidant and anticancer actions. Therefore, we tested here the possible ameliorative effect of emodin on CP nephrotoxicity in rats. Emodin was given orally (10mg/kg/day for nine consecutive days), and on day 4, some of the treated rats were also injected intraperitoneally with either saline or CP (6 mg/kg). Five days after CP treatment, rats were killed, and blood and urine samples, and kidneys were collected for the assessment of histopathological renal damage and apoptosis, and for biochemical estimation of creatinine and urea concentrations in plasma and urine, several cytosolic antioxidant enzyme activities in kidneys, and urinalyses. CP significantly increased the concentrations of urea and creatinine, and decreased creatinine clearance. It also significantly reduced cortical glutathione concentration and the activity of superoxide dismutase. CP treatment significantly increased urine volume and N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase activity and significantly decreased osmolarity and protein concentrations. Emodin treatment markedly and significantly mitigated all these effects. Sections from saline- and emodin-treated rats showed apparently normal proximal tubules. However, kidneys of CP-treated rats had a moderate degree of necrosis. This was markedly lessened when CP was given simultaneously with emodin. The concentration of CP in the cortical tissues was not significantly altered by emodin treatment. The results suggested that emodin had ameliorated CP nephrotoxicity in rats. Pending further pharmacological and toxicological studies emodin may be considered a potentially useful nephroprotective agent.

Cell Biochem Biophys. 2011 Oct 30. [Epub ahead of print]
Apoptosis of Dalton’s lymphoma due to in vivo treatment with emodin is associated with modulations of hydrogen peroxide metabolizing antioxidant enzymes.
Singh KB, Trigun SK.
The evolving concept of pro-oxidative mechanism-based antitumor activity of emodin (1,3,8-trihydroxy-6-methyl anthraquinone), derived mainly from in vitro studies, needs to be defined for in vivo tumor models. The present article describes apoptosis and regression of Dalton’s lymphoma (DL) in mice by emodin vis a vis modulations of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) metabolizing antioxidant enzymes in the tumor cells in vivo. A non-toxic dose (40 mg/kg bw) of emodin, given intraperitoneally to the DL bearing mice daily up to 12th post DL transplantation day, caused a significant decline (P < 0.05) in the number of viable DL cells and could significantly increase life span of the DL mice (P < 0.01). A significant decline in Bcl2/Bax ratio consistent with the release of mitochondrial cytochrome c release in DL cells from emodin-treated DL mice suggested that emodin could induce mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis in the DL cells in vivo. Apoptosis of DL cells by emodin was further confirmed by the appearance of smaller DNA fragments on DNA ladder analysis. Over activation of both, the Cu-Zn-superoxide dismutases (SOD1) and Mn-SOD (SOD2), has been found correlated with the tumor suppression. Emodin caused significant increases in the expression and activity of SOD1 and SOD2 in the DL cells. H(2)O(2) produced by SODs is degraded by catalase and glutathione peroxidase in the cells. Both these enzymes were observed to be declined significantly with a concomitant increment in H(2)O(2) concentration (P < 0.01) in the DL cells from emodin-treated DL mice. It is concluded that emodin is able to induce mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis in the DL cells in vivo via reciprocal modulations of H(2)O(2) producing and degrading antioxidant enzymes.

Oncol Rep. 2011 Jul;26(1):81-9. doi: 10.3892/or.2011.1257. Epub 2011 Apr 12.
Antiproliferative and antimetastatic effects of emodin on human pancreatic cancer.
Liu A, Chen H, Wei W, Ye S, Liao W, Gong J, Jiang Z, Wang L, Lin S.
Emodin (1, 3, 8-trihydroxy-6-methylanthraquinone) is an active constituent isolated from the root of Rheum palmatum L and is the main effective component of some Chinese herbs and plants. Pharmacological studies have demonstrated that emodin exhibits anti-cancer effects on several human cancers. However, the molecular mechanisms of emodin-mediated tumor regression have not been fully defined. This study was performed to investigate the antiproliferative and antimetastatic effects of emodin on pancreatic cancer in vitro and in vivo. Our results showed that emodin induced a higher percentage of growth inhibition and apoptosis in the pancreatic cancer cell line SW1990 compared to that of control, and emodin suppressed the migration and invasion of SW1990 cells in a dose-dependent manner. To investigate the possible mechanisms involved in these events, we performed electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) and Western blot analysis, and found that emodin significantly down-regulated NF-κB DNA-binding activity, survivin and MMP-9 in SW1990 cells. Moreover, the expression of cleaved caspase-3 was up-regulated in SW1990 cells after treatment with emodin. In addition, a metastatic model simulating human pancreatic cancer was established by orthotopic implantation of histologically intact human tumor tissue into the pancreatic wall of nude mice. Oral administration of emodin significantly decreased tumor weight and metastasis compared to control. Furthermore, the expression of NF-κB, survivin and MMP-9 were also suppressed in tumor tissues after treatment with emodin. Collectively, our results indicated that emodin exerts antiproliferative and antimetastatic activity on pancreatic cancer both in vitro and in vivo, which may be related to down-regulation of NF-κB and its regulated molecules such as survivin and MMP-9 proteins. Consequently, these results provide important insights into emodin as an anti-invasive agent for the therapy of human pancreatic cancer.

Int J Oncol. 2005 Sep;27(3):839-46.
Emodin suppresses hyaluronic acid-induced MMP-9 secretion and invasion of glioma cells.
Kim MS, Park MJ, Kim SJ, Lee CH, Yoo H, Shin SH, Song ES, Lee SH.
Emodin, an inhibitor of protein tyrosine kinase, possesses antiviral, immunosuppressive, anti-inflammatory and anticancer effects. In the present study, we investigated the effect of emodin on the hyaluronic acid (HA)-induced invasion of human glioma cells. Emodin significantly inhibited the HA-induced invasion through a Matrigel coated chamber, secretion of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2, and HA-induced secretion of MMP-9 in glioma cells. To investigate the possible mechanisms involved in these events, we performed Western blot analysis using phospho-specific antibodies, and found that emodin inhibited phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase (FAK), extracellular regulated protein kinase (ERK) 1/2 and Akt/PKB; emodin also suppressed the transcriptional activity of two transcription factors, activator protein-1 (AP-1) and nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB), in glioma cells. In addition, oral administration of emodin suppressed in vivo MMP secretion by glioma tumors in nude mice. Taken together, our results indicate that emodin can effectively inhibit HA-induced MMP secretion and invasion of glioma through inhibition of FAK, ERK1/2 and Akt/PKB activation and partial inhibition of AP-1 and NF-kappaB transcriptional activities. Consequently, these results provide important insights into emodin as an anti-invasive agent for the therapy of human glioma.

Yao Xue Xue Bao. 2004 Apr;39(4):254-8.
Inhibitory effects of emodin on angiogenesis.
Wang XH, Wu SY, Zhen YS.
AIM:
To determine the anti-angiogenic activity of emodin.
METHODS:
Chick embryo assay and cultured endothelial cells were used.
RESULTS:
Emodin at doses of 150 and 300 microg/egg caused 37.6% and 63.2% inhibition of angiogenesis, respectively. Emodin was shown to inhibit the proliferation of primary cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells in the absence or presence of basic-fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) or the presence of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in a dose-dependent manner. The IC50 values by MTT assay were 5.56, 8.40 or 6.91 mg x L(-1), respectively. Emodin at concentrations from 5.4 to 21.6 mg x L(-1) induced apoptosis of endothelial cells for 37.6% to 72.6%. Emodin caused endothelial cell cycle arrest at G2/M phase. After emodin treatment, there was a down-regulation of Cyclin B1, P34cdc2, and Bcl-2 protein expression while the Bax protein expression was unaffected.
CONCLUSION:
Emodin shows anti-angiogenic activity and might be useful for the development of novel anti-cancer therapy.

Biochem Pharmacol. 2004 Jul 15;68(2):361-71.
Inhibitory effect of emodin on tumor invasion through suppression of activator protein-1 and nuclear factor-kappaB.
Huang Q, Shen HM, Ong CN.
3-Methyl-1,6,8-trihydroxyanthraquinone (emodin) is an active component from the rhizome of Rheum palmatum, a widely used traditional Chinese herb. In this study, we found that emodin significantly inhibited 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-induced in vitro invasion of human cancer cells including HSC5 and MDA-MB-231 cells. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are known to be associated with cancer invasion. Zymographic analysis showed that emodin suppressed TPA-induced MMP-9 activity in a concentration-dependent manner. We further demonstrated that emodin reduced the transcriptional activity of activator protein-1 (AP-1) and nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB), two important nuclear transcription factors involved in MMP-9 expression. Emodin suppressed the phosphorylation of two mitogen-activated protein kinases, extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase and c-Jun N-terminal kinase, but not p38 kinase, leading to reduced c-Jun phosphorylation and AP-1 DNA-binding. Moreover, emodin inhibited TPA-induced degradation of inhibitor of kappaBalpha, nuclear translocation of p65, and NF-kappaB DNA-binding activity. Taken together, these results suggest that emodin inhibits the invasiveness of human cancer cells by suppressing MMP-9 expression through inhibiting AP-1 and NF-kappaB signaling pathways.

Life Sci. 2006 Nov 25;79(26):2480-5. Epub 2006 Aug 17.
Emodin inhibits TNF alpha-induced MMP-1 expression through suppression of activator protein-1 (AP-1).
Lee J, Jung E, Lee J, Huh S, Hwang CH, Lee HY, Kim EJ, Cheon JM, Hyun CG, Kim YS, Park D.
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are the proteases involved in the degradation of the extracellular matrix. MMP-1 is thought to be one of the key enzymes acting in fibrolysis, a process closely related to tissue remodeling. In this study, we found that emodin, an anthraquinone which has been isolated from the rhizome of Rheum palmatum, significantly inhibited TNF alpha-induced MMP-1 gene expression in a concentration-dependent manner. Therefore, we have attempted to characterize the inhibitory mechanism of emodin in TNF alpha-induced MMP-1 expression. Emodin was determined to inhibit TNF alpha-induced activation of AP-1 promoter, an important nuclear transcription factor in MMP-1 expression. Additionally, we detected that emodin suppressed the TNF alpha-induced phosphorylation of two mitogen-activated protein kinases, extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase and c-Jun N-terminal kinase, but it did not suppress the TNF alpha-induced phosphorylation of p38 kinase. In a consistent result, the TNF alpha-induced MMP-1 expression was inhibited by PD98059 (MEK/ERK inhibitor) and SP600125 (JNK inhibitor), but was not inhibited by SB203580, a p38 MAPK inhibitor. Taken together, these results show that emodin suppresses TNF alpha-induced MMP-1 expression through the inhibition of the AP-1 signaling pathway.

Mol Med Report. 2011 Mar-Apr;4(2):221-7. doi: 10.3892/mmr.2011.414. Epub 2011 Jan 3.
Emodin potentiates the antitumor effects of gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer cells via inhibition of nuclear factor-κB.
Liu A, Chen H, Tong H, Ye S, Qiu M, Wang Z, Tan W, Liu J, Lin S.
Many studies have demonstrated that emodin inhibits the growth and induces the apoptosis and chemo-sensitization of various cancer cells in animal models. The aim of this study was to investigate the molecular mechanism of the chemo-sensitization potential of emodin on gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer cell lines via inhibition of nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB). SW1990 and SW1990/GZ cells were treated with: i) emodin (20 µmol/l), ii) NF-κB inhibitor Bay 11-7082 (5 µmol/l), iii) gemcitabine (20 µmol/l), iv) pre-treated with emodin for 24 h followed by coincubation with gemcitabine for 24 h, or v) pre-treated with Bay 11-7082 for 1 h followed by treatment with gemcitabine for 24 h. SW1990 and SW1990/GZ cells were also treated with emodin (20, 40 and 80 µmol/l). Cellular proliferation and apoptosis were detected by the Cell Counting Kit-8 (CCK-8) assay and flow cytometry. NF-κB protein was detected by Western blotting. SW1990/GZ cell morphological changes were observed under optical and fluorescence microscopes. Emodin strongly inhibited the proliferation and induced the apoptosis of both pancreatic cancer cell lines. Furthermore, emodin combined with gemcitabine induced a higher percentage of growth inhibition and apoptosis in both pancreatic cancer cell lines compared to gemcitabine alone. Pre-treatment of SW1990/GZ cells with Bay 11-7082 for 1 h followed by gemcitabine resulted in greater inhibitory and apoptosis rates compared to gemcitabine alone. The resistant pancreatic cell line SW1990/GZ presented higher constitutive NF-κB protein expression compared to the SW1990 cells. Emodin not only down-regulated NF-κB in a dose-dependent manner in SW1990 and SW1990/GZ cells under unstimulated conditions, but also inhibited gemcitabine-induced NF-κB protein expression. Emodin potentiated the antitumor effects of gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer, which was related to the down-regulation of NF-κB.

Yao Xue Xue Bao. 2011 Feb;46(2):146-52.
[Role of nuclear factor-kappaB on emodin-induced sensitization of pancreatic cancer to gemcitabine].
[Article in Chinese]
Liu A, Hu YS, Wang ZH, Tang LL, Ke PY, Lin SZ.
In view of gemcitabine resistance has limited clinical activity of gemcitabine as a cellulotoxic drug in pancreatic cancer patients, this study is designed to investigate the effect of emodin on the sensitivity of pancreatic cancer to gemcitabine as well as its mechanism. After gemcitabine-resistant pancreatic cancer cell line (SW1990/GZ) was established by escalating doses of gemcitabine serially in pancreatic cancer cell line (SW1990). The cellular proliferation was detected by cell counting kit-8 (CCK-8) assay. Flow cytometry (FCM) was used to determine apoptosis of pancreatic cancer cells. The activity of NF-kappaB in pancreatic cancer cells was measured by electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA). Western blotting was used to detect the protein expression of Bcl-2 and Survivin in SW1990/GZ cells. Metastatic model simulating human pancreatic cancer was established by orthotopic implantation of histologically intact human tumor tissue into pancreatic wall of nude mice. Also, immunohistochemistry was used to detect the positive expression of Ki-67, NF-kappaB, Bcl-2 and Survivin in the tumors. The results show that pretreatment of cells with emodin followed by gemcitabine induced a higher percentage of growth inhibition and apoptosis of pancreatic cancer cells than that of gemcitabine alone. In addition to in vitro results, emodin in combination with gemcitabine is much more effective as an antitumor agent compared to either agent alone in the orthotopic tumor model. Further study showed that the emodin with or without gemcitabine significantly down-regulates NF-kappaB and its regulated molecules such as Bcl-2 and Survivin proteins both in vitro and in vivo. It is concluded that inactivation of NF-kappaB signaling pathway by emodin resulting in the chemosensitization of pancreatic cancer to gemcitabine, which is likely to be an important and novel strategy for the treatment of pancreatic cancer.

Asian J Androl. 2008 Jul;10(4):625-34.
Emodin induces apoptosis in human prostate cancer cell LNCaP.
Yu CX, Zhang XQ, Kang LD, Zhang PJ, Chen WW, Liu WW, Liu QW, Zhang JY.
AIM:
To elucidate effects and mechanisms of emodin in prostate cancer cells.
METHODS:
Viability of emodin-treated LNCaP cells and PC-3 cells was measured by MTT assay. Following emodin treatments, DNA fragmentation was assayed by agarose gel electrophoresis. Apoptosis rate and the expression of Fas and FasL were assayed by flow cytometric analysis. The mRNA expression levels of androgen receptor (AR), prostate-specific antigen (PSA), p53, p21, Bcl-2, Bax, caspase-3, -8, -9 and Fas were detected by RT-PCR, and the protein expression levels of AR, p53 and p21 were detected by Western blot analysis.
RESULTS:
In contrast to PC-3, emodin caused a marked increase in apoptosis and a decrease in cell proliferation in LNCaP cells. The expression of AR and PSA was decreased and the expression of p53 and p21 was increased as the emodin concentrations were increased. In the same time, emodin induced apoptosis of LNCaP cells through the upregulation of caspase-3 and -9, as well as the increase of Bax /Bcl-2 ratio. However, it did not involve modulation of Fas or caspase-8 protein expression.
CONCLUSION:
In prostate cancer cell line, LNCaP, emodin inhibites the proliferation by AR and p53-p21 pathways, and induces apoptosis via the mitochondrial pathway.

Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2011 Mar;294(3):445-52. doi: 10.1002/ar.21352. Epub 2011 Feb 9.
Emodin prolongs recipient survival time after orthotopic liver transplantation in rats by polarizing the Th1/Th2 paradigm to Th2.
Tong H, Chen K, Chen H, Wu H, Lin H, Ni Z, Lin S.
Advances in immunosuppressive drugs have improved the short-term survival of liver transplantation. However, drug toxicities have been a serious problem in patients after long-term administration. Therefore, it is necessary to develop a novel immunosuppressant with low-toxicity. We investigated the immunosuppressive effects of Emodin on acute graft rejection following liver transplantation in rats. The recipient rats of orthotopic liver transplantation were divided into groups as follows: isograft+NS group, allograft+NS group, and allograft+emodin group. The survival time of the recipients in each group was recorded. Histopathological changes in the liver, as well as serum concentrations of IL-2, TNF-α, and IL-10 and their expressions in liver tissue were determined. Our results showed that Emodin treatment prolonged liver allograft survival time and inhibited histopathologic changes of acute graft rejection. The rejection activity index in groups isograft+NS, allograft+NS, and allograft+emodin were 1.52 ± 0.37, 6.95 ± 0.75, and 4.23 ± 0.51, respectively (P < 0.01, isograft+NS group vs. allograft+emodin group and allograft+NS group vs. allograft+emodin group). The serum levels of IL-2 and TNF-α were down-regulated but that of IL-10 was up-regulated by Emodin. Serum levels of IL-2 and TNF-α were higher in allograft+NS group than the allograft+emodin group, but that of IL-10 showed opposite effects (P < 0.05 or 0.01). Changes in the expression of these cytokines in transplanted liver tissue were consistent with changes in serum concentrations. These results demonstrate that Emodin has therapeutic potentials for alleviating acute rejection following liver transplantation in rats and prolonging liver allograft survival. The mechanisms underlying this effect may be associated with polarizing the Th1/Th2 paradigm to Th2.

World J Gastroenterol. 2005 May 21;11(19):2941-4.
Effects of emodin and double blood supplies on liver regeneration of reduced size graft liver in rat model.
Meng KW, Lv Y, Yu L, Wu SL, Pan CE.
AIM:
To study the influences of emodin and reconstruction of double blood supplies on liver regeneration of reduced size graft liver in rat model.
METHODS:
A total of 45 SD-SD rat reduced size liver transplantation models were randomly divided into three groups (A-C). The conventional reduced size liver transplantation was performed on rats in group A, while the hepatic artery blood supply was restored in groups B and C. The emodin (1.5 mg/kg/d) was given by intraperitoneal route in group C only. The recipients were killed on the seventh day after the operation. The proliferative cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), TBil and ALT of serum were detected, and the pathological changes of liver cell were observed.
RESULTS:
The numbers of the rats that survived in A, B, and C group on the seventh day after operation were 14, 13, 13, respectively. The levels of TBil (31.5+/-5.2 micromol/L, 23.2+/-3.1 micromol/L vs 38.6+/-6.8 micromol/L), and ALT (5 351+/-1 050 nKat, 1300+/-900 nKat vs 5779+/-1202 nKat) in serum in groups B and C were lower than those in group A (P<0.05), while the expression of PCNA in groups B or C was higher than that in group A (22.0+/-3.5%, 28.2+/-4.2% vs 18.6+/-3.2%, P<0.05). The deeper staining nuclei, double nuclei, multi-nuclei and much glycogen were observed in liver cells of groups B and C, especially in group C, while fewer were found in liver cells of group A. CONCLUSION: The reconstruction of arterial blood supply is very important for rat liver regeneration after reduced size liver transplantation. Emodin has the effect of promoting liver regeneration and improving liver function in rats after reduced size transplantation. The possible mechanism is improving proliferation of liver cell and protecting liver cells from injury.

Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol. 2010 Aug;37(8):790-4. Epub 2010 Mar 12.
Emodin attenuates acute rejection of liver allografts by inhibiting hepatocellular apoptosis and modulating the Th1/Th2 balance in rats.
Lin SZ, Chen KJ, Tong HF, Jing H, Li H, Zheng SS.
1. In the present study, we investigated the immunosuppressive effects and mechanisms of action of emodin on acute graft rejection following liver transplantation in a rat model of orthotopic liver transplantation. 2. Rats were divided into three groups: Group A, syngenic control (Brown Norway-to-Brown Norway); Group B, acute rejection group (Lewis-to-Brown Norway); and Group C, emodin-treated group (Lewis-to-Brown Norway treated with 50 mg/kg emodin, 50 mg/kgxd, injected intraperitoneally once a day from days 1 to 5 posttransplantation). The survival time of the recipients in each group was recorded. Histopathological changes in the liver, hepatocellular apoptosis, serum concentrations of interleukin (IL)-2, interferon (IFN)-gamma and IL-4 and their expression in liver tissue were determined. 3. Emodin treatment prolonged liver allograft survival time from 10.9 days in Group B to 25.6 days in Group C. The rejection activity index (calculated according to the Banff Schema) in Groups A, B and C was 1.29 +/- 0.47, 7.58 +/- 0.85 and 4.72 +/- 0.79, respectively (P < 0.01 for Groups A and B vs Group C), whereas the apoptosis index in the three groups was 15.51 +/- 1.47, 39.50 +/- 1.65 and 16.72 +/- 1.73, respectively (P < 0.01 for Groups A and C vs Group B). Serum levels of IL-2 and IFN-gamma were higher, whereas levels of IL-4 were lower, in the acute rejection group (Group B) than in the emodin-treated group (Group C; P < 0.05). Changes in the expression of these cytokines in transplanted liver tissue were consistent with changes in serum concentrations. 4. In conclusion, emodin effectively suppresses acute graft rejection in vivo to prolong the survival of recipient rats. The mechanism underlying this effect may be associated with the prevention of hepatocyte apoptosis and with a changing in the balance of Th1/Th2 cytokines towards Th2.

Zhongguo Zhong Xi Yi Jie He Za Zhi. 2008 Jan;28(1):91-3.
[Experimental advance of applying emodin for prevention and treatment of liver diseases].
[Article in Chinese]
Xu XC, Lin SZ.
The experimental researches of applying emodin for prevention and treatment of liver diseases in recent years were reviewed. Emodin can inhibit the growth of liver tumor cells in vitro and in vivo, inducing cell apoptosis is one of its mechanisms. Emodin also has the effects of liver protection, anti-liver fibrosis, and so on, the mechanisms for those effects still need more studies.

Zhongguo Zhong Xi Yi Jie He Za Zhi. 2005 Nov;25(11):1030-2.
[Emodin and organ fibrosis].
[Article in Chinese]
Gao ZQ, Wang CH.
The aim of this article was to investigate the mechanisms of emodin in antagonizing against organ fibrosis, and to illustrate that emodin can be an effective Chinese herbal preparation for treatment of organ fibrosis.

Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol. 2009 Feb;36(2):146-53. Epub 2008 Sep 10.
Inhibitory effect of emodin on bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis in mice.
Chen XH, Sun RS, Hu JM, Mo ZY, Yang ZF, Jin GY, Guan WD, Zhong NS.
1. Currently, there is no satisfactory treatment for pulmonary fibrosis. Emodin, a component in Chinese herbs, has been shown to have an antifibrotic effect on pancreatic fibrosis and liver fibrosis. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that emodin may attenuate the development of pulmonary fibrosis. 2. Mice were randomly divided into five groups (n = 16 in each). One group was a control group; the remaining four groups were treated with intratracheal instillation of 3 mg/kg bleomycin (BLM). The following day, emodin (5, 10 or 20 mg/kg per day, p.o.) treatment was started for three of the BLM-treated groups and was continued for 21 days. The fourth BLM-treated group (and the control group) received daily 0.5% sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (placebo) by gavage over the same period. 3. Bleomycin challenge provoked severe pulmonary fibrosis, with marked increases in fibrosis fraction, hydroxyproline content and myeloperoxidase activity in lung tissue. Emodin treatment (10 and 20 mg/kg per day, p.o.) attenuated all these biochemical indices, as well as histopathological alterations induced by BLM. Furthermore, in mice injected with BLM, elevated levels of transforming growth factor-beta1, interleukin (IL)-4 and IL-13 were found in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. These increases were significantly inhibited by 10 and 20 mg/kg per day emodin. 4. In cell culture, exposure of cells to 6.25, 12.5, 25 or 50 micromol/L emodin for 24 h decreased fibroblast proliferation. Treatment of cells with the same concentrations of emodin for 72 h decreased collagen production by fibroblasts. In addition, emodin (6.25, 12.5, 25 or 50 micromol/L) inhibited the steady state expression of alpha1 (I) procollagen and alpha2 (I) procollagen mRNA in a dose-dependent manner. 5. The results of the present study suggest that emodin may be effective in the treatment of pulmonary fibrosis.

Chin J Integr Med. 2010 Apr;16(2):151-6. Epub 2010 May 16.
Effect of emodin in suppressing acute rejection following liver allograft transplantation in rats.
Lin SZ, Tong HF, Chen KJ, Jing H, Yang X, Zheng SS.
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the mechanism of action of emodin for suppressing acute allograft rejection in a rat model of liver transplantation.
METHODS:
Brown Norway (BW) recipient rats of orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) were divided into three groups, Group A receiving isografting (with BW rats as donor), Group B receiving allografting (with Lewis rats as donor), Group C receiving allografting and emodin treatment (50 mg/kg daily). They were sacrificed on day 7 of post-transplantation, and their hepatic histology, plasma cytokine levels, and T-cell subset expression were detected.
RESULTS:
Compared with those in Group A, rats: in Group B exhibited severe allograft rejection with a rejection activity index (RAI) of 7.67+/-0.98, extensive hepatocellular apoptosis with an apoptosis index (AI) of 35.83+/-2.32, and elevated plasma levels of interleukin-2 (IL-2), interleukin-10 (IL-10), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), CD4(+) and CD4 CD4(+)/CD8(+) ratio. However, recipients in Group C showed a decrease in histological grade of rejection and hepatocellular apoptosis, as well as a decrease in plasma levels of IL-2, TNF-alpha, CD4(+) and CD4(+)/CD8(+) ratio, but elevated levels of IL-10 as compared with the allograft group.
CONCLUSION:
Post-OLT acute rejection could be attenuated by emodin, its mechanism of action may be associated with protecting hepatocytes from apoptosis, polarizing the Th 1 paradigm to Th2, and inhibiting the proliferation of CD4(+) T cell in plasma.

World J Gastroenterol. 2007 Jan 21;13(3):378-82.
Effect of emodin on pancreatic fibrosis in rats.
Wang CH, Gao ZQ, Ye B, Cai JT, Xie CG, Qian KD, Du Q.
AIM:
To establish the rats model of chronic fibrosing pancreatitis and to prove the anti-fibrotic effect of emodin in chronic pancreatitis with fibrosis.
METHODS:
Fifty rats were randomly divided into five groups, 10 rats in each group. Trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) was infused into the pancreatic duct to induce chronic pancreatitis in rats (except for normal group). Emodin-treated rats were fed with different doses of emodin (20, 40 and 80 mg/kg body weight) for 28 d, while normal group and control group received 0.9% sodium chloride solution. Serum levels of hyaluronic acid (HA) and laminin (LN) were determined by radioimmunoassay. Histopathological alterations were studied by optical microscopy. Expression of collagen was also examined while transforming growth factor-beta-1 (TGF-beta(1)) was localized by immunochemistry.
RESULTS:
In emodin-treated rats, the serum levels of HA and LN were decreased significantly (HA, 62.2 +/- 19.3 microg/L vs 112.7 +/- 26.5 microg/L, P < 0.05; LN 44.3 +/- 10.4 microg/L vs 86.2 +/- 16.5 microg/L, P < 0.05); the degree of fibrosis was ameliorated observably; the expression of collagen in pancreatic tissue was reduced especially in high-dose emodin-treated group (36% +/- 5% vs 42% +/- 6%, P < 0.05); with the increased doses of emodin, the expression of TGF-beta(1) was declined, compared with those in control group.
CONCLUSION:
Emodin has an anti-fibrotic effect

Zhonghua Yi Xue Za Zhi. 2006 Sep 26;86(36):2552-5.
[Effect of emodin on pancreatic fibrosis: experiment with rats].
[Article in Chinese]
Wang CH, Gao ZQ, Ye B, Xie CG, Qian KD, Cai JT, Du Q.
OBJECTIVE:
To study the effect of emodin on pancreatic fibrosis and potential mechanism thereof.
METHODS:
Fifty SD rats were randomly divided into 5 equal groups: normal control group, model control group, low-dose emodin-treated group, mediate-dose emodin-treated group, and high-dose emodin-treated group. The rats of the latter 4 groups underwent infusion of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) into the pancreatic duct so as to establish models of pancreatic fibrosis. The emodin-treated rats were fed with different doses of emodin (20, 40, and 80 mg/kg body weight), while the normal and model control groups received 0.9% sodium chloride solution instead. Twenty-eight days later the rats were killed, blood samples were collected, and their pancreases were taken out. The serum levels of hyaluronic acid (HA) and laminin (LN) were determined by radioimmunoassay. The histopathological alterations were studied by optical microscopy. The expression of collagen was examined by Van Gieson staining. Western blotting was used to detect the protein expression of transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1)).
RESULTS:
(1) The serum level of HA of the low-dose, mediate-dose, and high-dose emodin-treated groups were 87 microg/L +/- 22 microg/L, 78 microg/L +/- 25 microg/L, and 62 microg/L +/- 19 microg/L respectively, all significantly lower than that of the model control group (113 microg/L +/- 27 microg/L, P < 0.05 or < 0.01). The serum levels of laminin in the low-dose, mediate-dose, and high-dose emodin-treated groups were 67 microg/L +/- 14 microg/L, 57 microg/L +/- 12 microg/L, and 44 microg/L +/- 10 microg/L respectively, all significantly lower than that of the model control group (86 microg/L +/- 17 microg/L, P < 0.05 or P < 0.01); (2) The degrees of fibrosis of the emodin-treated groups were obviously ameliorated in comparison with the model control group, the higher the dose of emodin the more improved the pathological changes, especially in the high-dose emodin-treated group (P < 0.05). (3) The percentages of collagen positive cells of the low-dose, mediate-dose, and high-dose emodin-treated groups were 39% +/- 7%, 38% +/- 4%, and 36% +/- 5% respectively, all lower than that of the model control group (42% +/- 6%), with a significant difference between the high-dose emodin-treated group and the model control group (P < 0.05). (4) The protein content of TGF-beta(1) of the low-dose, mediate-dose, and high-dose emodin-treated groups were 44.3% +/- 2.1%, 39.2% +/- 1.8%, and 28.8% +/- 1.6% respectively, all significantly lower than that of the model control group (60.7% +/- 1.7%, all P < 0.05), and the protein content of TGF-beta(1) of the high-dose emodin-treated group was significantly lower than those of the other 2 emodin-treated groups (both P < 0.05).
CONCLUSION:
Emodin has an anti-fibrosis effect on pancreatic fibrosis, which maybe related to the content of TGF-beta(1) protein.

Br J Pharmacol. 2010 Dec;161(7):1628-44. doi: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.2010.00993.x.
Emodin suppresses lipopolysaccharide-induced pro-inflammatory responses and NF-κB activation by disrupting lipid rafts in CD14-negative endothelial cells.
Meng G, Liu Y, Lou C, Yang H.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:
Emodin [1,3,8-trihydroxy-6-methylanthraquinone] has been reported to exhibit vascular anti-inflammatory properties. However, the corresponding mechanisms are not well understood. The present study was designed to explore the molecular target(s) of emodin in modifying lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-associated signal transduction pathways in endothelial cells.
EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH:
Cultured primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs; passages 3-5) were pre-incubated with emodin (1-50 µg·mL(-1) ). LPS-induced expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines [interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6] and chemokines (IL-8; CCL2/MCP-1) were determined by reverse transcription-PCR and elisa. Nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) activation, inhibitor of κB (IκB)α degradation and Toll-like receptor-4 (TLR-4) were detected by immunocytochemistry and Western blotting. Cholesterol depletion [by methyl β-cyclodextrin (MBCD), a specific cholesterol binding agent] and cholesterol replenishment were further used to investigate the roles of lipid rafts in activation of HUVECs.
KEY RESULTS:
Emodin inhibited, concentration-dependently, the expression of LPS-induced pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6) and chemokines (IL-8, CCL2) and, in parallel, inhibited NF-κB activation and IκBα degradation in HUVECs. However, emodin did not inhibit the NF-κB activation and IκBα degradation induced by IL-1β. The cholesterol binding agent, MBCD, inhibited LPS-induced NF-κB activation in passaged HUVECs [which also lack the LPS receptor, membrane CD14 (mCD14)], showing that lipid rafts played a key role in LPS signalling in mCD14-negative HUVECs. Moreover, emodin disrupted the formation of lipid rafts in cell membranes by depleting cholesterol.
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS:
Lipid rafts were crucial in facilitating inflammatory responses of mCD14-negative HUVECs to LPS. Emodin disrupted lipid rafts through depleting cholesterol and, consequently, inhibited inflammatory responses in endothelial cells.

Chin Med J (Engl). 2002 Jul;115(7):1035-8.
Effect of emodin on proliferation and differentiation of 3T3-L1 preadipocyte and FAS activity.
Zhang C, Teng L, Shi Y, Jin J, Xue Y, Shang K, Gu J.
OBJECTIVE:
To study the effects of emodin on proliferation and differentiation of 3T3-L1 preadipocyte and the possible mechanism.
METHODS:
Cell proliferation was determined by MTT spectrophotometry, cell differentiation was determined by Oil Red O staining,and fatty acid synthase (FAS) activity was determined by spectrophotometry.
RESULTS:
Emodin promoted proliferation of 3T3-L1 preadipocyte at low concentration and inhibited the proliferation at high concentration in a dose-related manner. In contrast, it inhibited cell differentiation into adipocyte at low concentration in a dose-related manner. In vitro emodin inhibited the activity of FAS in a dose-related manner.
CONCLUSIONS:
The effects of emodin on 3T3-L1 cell’s proliferation and differentiation are dose dependent. Emodin inhibits the activity of FAS. Our results suggest that emodin should have a potential to serve as a fat-reducing drug.

Oncogene. 1996 Feb 1;12(3):571-6.
Sensitization of HER-2/neu-overexpressing non-small cell lung cancer cells to chemotherapeutic drugs by tyrosine kinase inhibitor emodin.
Zhang L, Hung MC.
Overexpression of the HER-2/neu proto-oncogene which encodes tyrosine kinase receptor p185neu, has been observed frequently in many human cancers, including non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and is correlated with poor patient survival in these cancers. In addition, HER-2/neu overexpression in NSCLC is known to induce chemoresistance. Recently, we demonstrated that emodin, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, suppresses HER-2/neu tyrosine kinase activity in HER-2/neu-overexpressing breast cancer cells and preferentially represses proliferation of these cells. The work described here was carried out to examine (1) whether the tyrosine kinase activity of p185neu is required for resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs of HER-2/neu-overexpressing NSCLC cells and (2) whether the tyrosine kinase inhibitor emodin can sensitize these cells to chemotherapeutic drugs. We found that emodin decreased tyrosine phosphorylation of HER-2/neu and preferentially suppressed proliferation of HER-2/neu-overexpressing NSCLC cells. Furthermore, the combination of emodin with cisplatin, doxorubicin or etoposide (VP16) synergistically inhibited the proliferation of HER-2/neu-overexpressing lung cancer cells, whereas low doses of emodin, cisplatin, doxorubicin, or VP16 alone had only minimal antiproliferative effects on these cells. These results indicate that tyrosine kinase activity is required for the chemoresistant phenotype of HER-2/neu-overexpressing NSCLC cells and that tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as emodin can sensitize these cells to chemotherapeutic drugs. The results may have important implications in chemotherapy for HER-2/neu-overexpressing cancers.

Cancer Res. 2005 Mar 15;65(6):2287-95.
Emodin down-regulates androgen receptor and inhibits prostate cancer cell growth.
Cha TL, Qiu L, Chen CT, Wen Y, Hung MC.
Hormone-refractory relapse is an inevitable and lethal event for advanced prostate cancer patients after hormone deprivation. A growing body of evidence indicates that hormone deprivation may promote this aggressive prostate cancer phenotype. Notably, androgen receptor (AR) not only mediates the effect of androgen on the tumor initiation but also plays the major role in the relapse transition. This provides a strong rationale for searching new effective agents targeting the down-regulation of AR to treat or prevent advanced prostate cancer progression. Here, we show that emodin, a natural compound, can directly target AR to suppress prostate cancer cell growth in vitro and prolong the survival of C3(1)/SV40 transgenic mice in vivo. Emodin treatment resulted in repressing androgen-dependent transactivation of AR by inhibiting AR nuclear translocation. Emodin decreased the association of AR and heat shock protein 90 and increased the association of AR and MDM2, which in turn induces AR degradation through proteasome-mediated pathway in a ligand-independent manner. Our work indicates a new mechanism for the emodin-mediated anticancer effect and justifies further investigation of emodin as a therapeutic and preventive agent for prostate cancer.

In Vivo. 1996 Mar-Apr;10(2):185-90.
Oncogene signal transduction inhibitors from medicinal plants.
Chang CJ, Ashendel CL, Geahlen RL, McLaughlin JL, Waters DJ.
Signal transduction is believed to be altered by cellular oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes during the transformation of normal cells into malignant cells. This proposition offers an attractive target for oncogene-based anticancer drug discovery from natural sources. Protein kinases encoded or modulated by oncogenes were used to prescreen the potential antitumor activity of medicinal plants. Protein-tyrosine kinase-directed fractionation and separation of the crude extracts of Polygonum cuspidatum and Koelreuteria henryi have led to the isolation of three different classes of protein-tyrosine kinase inhibitors, anthraquinone, stilbene and flavonoid. The anthraquinone inhibitor, emodin, displayed highly selective activities against src-Her-2/neu and ras-oncogenes.

J Pharm Pharmacol. 2004 Jul;56(7):915-9.
Evaluation of the anti-inflammatory and cytotoxic effects of anthraquinones and anthracenes derivatives in human leucocytes.
Chen RF, Shen YC, Huang HS, Liao JF, Ho LK, Chou YC, Wang WY, Chen CF.
A variety of anthracene- and anthraquinone-related derivatives, modified from three types of lead structures, including 9-acyloxy 1,5-dichloroanthracene (type I), 1,5-bisacyloxy-anthraquinones with O-linked substituents (type II) and 1,5-bisacyloxy-anthraquinones with S-linked substituents (type III), were synthesized and evaluated by an in-vitro bioassay for their anti-inflammatory and cytotoxic effects in human leucocytes. Among these derivatives, type I compounds displayed potent anti-inflammatory activity against phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA)-induced superoxide anion production, a bio-marker of inflammatory mediator production by neutrophils, with 50% inhibition (IC50) concentrations (microM) for compounds 1f, 1g, 1h and 1m being 13.8 +/- 3.0, 6.3 +/- 4.1, 33.2 +/- 1.3 and 33.9 +/- 5.7, respectively. Type II and type III derivatives (i. e., 1,5-bisacyloxy anthraquinone-related compounds) and the reference compound, emodin, exhibited relatively minor (20-40%) inhibitory effect against superoxide production by neutrophils. Furthermore, none of these compounds showed a significant cytotoxic effect in human neutrophils. In conclusion, these results suggest that compounds modified from 9-acyloxy 1,5-dichloroanthracence (type I) are more powerful than the other two types as anti-inflammatory drugs. This is the first demonstration that derivatives modified from anthracenes or anthraquinones possess anti-inflammatory activity with no significant cytotoxicity in human neutrophils.

Neuropharmacology. 2005 Jul;49(1):103-11. Epub 2005 Mar 31.
Effects of emodin on synaptic transmission in rat hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons in vitro.
Gu JW, Hasuo H, Takeya M, Akasu T.
Rhubarb extracts provide neuroprotection after brain injury, but the mechanism of this protective effect is not known. The present study tests the hypothesis that rhubarb extracts interfere with the release of glutamate by brain neurons and, therefore, reduce glutamate excitotoxicity. To this end, the effects of emodin, an anthraquinone derivative extracted from Rheum tanguticum Maxim. Ex. Balf, on the synaptic transmission of CA1 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus were studied in vitro. The excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) was depressed by bath-application of emodin (0.3-30 microM). Paired-pulse facilitation (PPF) of the EPSP was significantly increased by emodin. The monosynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP) recorded in the presence of glutamate receptor antagonists (DNQX and AP5) was not altered by emodin. Emodin decreased the frequency, but not the amplitude, of the miniature EPSP (mEPSP). The inhibition of the EPSP induced by emodin was blocked by either 8-CPT, an adenosine A1 receptor antagonist, or by adenosine deaminase. These results suggest that emodin inhibits the EPSP by decreasing the release of glutamate from Schaffer collateral/commissural terminals via the activation of adenosine A1 receptors in rat hippocampal CA1 area and that the neuroprotective effects of rhubarb extracts may result from decreased glutamate excitotoxicity.

J Ethnopharmacol. 2009 Jan 21;121(2):313-7. Epub 2008 Nov 17.
Anti-angiogenic effects of rhubarb and its anthraquinone derivatives.
He ZH, He MF, Ma SC, But PP.
Rhubarb root (Dahuang) is often included as an ingredient in traditional Chinese compound prescriptions for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. This application may possibly be mediated through anti-angiogensis and thus would shed light on its potential value in cancer therapy.
AIM OF THE STUDY:
To elucidate the anti-angiogenic properties of rhubarb root, we tested the inhibitory effects of different fractions and a series of anthraquinone derivatives against vessel formation in zebrafish embryos.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
The 95% ethanol extract and four subsequent fractions (n-hexane, ethyl acetate, n-butanol and aqueous fractions) of rhubarb root and five anthraquinone derivatives were investigated on zebrafish model by quantitative endogenous alkaline phosphatase assay and staining assay.
RESULTS:
Ethyl acetate fraction showed the strongest inhibition of vessel formation by 52%. Three anthraquinones (aloe-emodin, emodin and rhein) displayed potent anti-angiogenic activities.
CONCLUSIONS:
The angiogenic properties of rhubarb root may partly account for its use in inflammatory diseases. The anthraquinones with acidic or polar, hydrophilic substitution at C-6 or C-3 positions played a substantial role in inhibiting angiogenesis. The value of the zebrafish angiogenic model is further supported.

Cell Mol Life Sci. 2005 May;62(10):1167-75.
Emodin inhibits tumor cell migration through suppression of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Cdc42/Rac1 pathway.
Huang Q, Shen HM, Ong CN.
Enhanced cell migration is one of the underlying mechanisms in cancer invasion and metastasis. Therefore, inhibition of cell migration is considered to be an effective strategy for prevention of cancer metastasis.We found that emodin (3-methyl-1,6,8-trihydroxyanthraquinone), an active component from the rhizome of Rheum palmatum, significantly inhibited epidermal growth factor (EGF)- induced migration in various human cancer cell lines. In the search for the underlying molecular mechanisms, we demonstrated that phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) serves as the molecular target for emodin. In addition, emodin markedly suppressed EGF-induced activation of Cdc42 and Rac1 and the corresponding cytoskeleton changes. Moreover, emodin, but not LY294002, was able to block cell migration in cells transfected with constitutively active (CA)-Cdc42 and CA-Rac1 by interference with the formation of Cdc42/Rac1 and the p21-activated kinase complex. Taken together, data from this study suggest that emodin inhibits human cancer cell migration by suppressing the PI3K-Cdc42/Rac1 signaling pathway.

Med Res Rev. 2007 Sep;27(5):609-30.
Anti-cancer properties of anthraquinones from rhubarb.
Huang Q, Lu G, Shen HM, Chung MC, Ong CN.
Rhubarb has been used as a traditional Chinese medicine since ancient times and today it is still present in various herbal preparations. In this review the toxicological and anti-neoplastic potentials of the main anthraquinones from Rhubarb, Rheum palmatum, will be highlighted. It is interesting to note that although the chemical structures of various anthraquinones in this plant are similar, their bioactivities are rather different. The most abundant anthraquinone of rhubarb, emodin, was capable of inhibiting cellular proliferation, induction of apoptosis, and prevention of metastasis. These capabilities are reported to act through tyrosine kinases, phosphoinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), protein kinase C (PKC), NF-kappa B (NF-kappaB), and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling cascades. Aloe-emodin is another major component in rhubarb found to have anti-tumor properties. Its anti-proliferative property has been demonstrated to be through the p53 and its downstream p21 pathway. Our recent proteomic study also suggests that the molecular targets of these two anthraquinones are different. However, both components were found to be able to potentiate the anti-proliferation of various chemotherapeutic agents. Rhein is the other major rhubarb anthraquinone, although less well studied. This compound could effectively inhibit the uptake of glucose in tumor cells, caused changes in membrane-associated functions and led to cell death. Interestingly, all three major rhubarb anthraquinones were reported to have in vitro phototoxic. This re-evaluation of an old remedy suggests that several bioactive anthraquinones of rhubarb possess promising anti-cancer properties and could have a broad therapeutic potential.

Eur J Pharmacol. 2006 Dec 28;553(1-3):46-53. Epub 2006 Sep 23.
Anthraquinone derivative emodin inhibits tumor-associated angiogenesis through inhibition of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 phosphorylation.
Kaneshiro T, Morioka T, Inamine M, Kinjo T, Arakaki J, Chiba I, Sunagawa N, Suzui M, Yoshimi N.
An anthraquinone derivative, emodin, suppresses tumor development both in vitro and in vivo. In this study, we examined the anti-angiogenic activity of emodin and its modifying effect on the phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) 1/2. In cell cultures, emodin inhibited endothelial cell proliferation, migration, and tube formation in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, the mouse dorsal air sac assay revealed the vivo anti-angiogenic potential of emodin. Matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) expression, which is critical for the angiogenic process, including migration and tube formation, decreased after exposure to emodin, as determined by polymerase chain reaction with reverse transcription (RT-PCR) and gelatin zymography. Moreover, the phosphorylation of ERK 1/2 decreased after exposure to emodin in a dose-dependent manner. These observations suggest that emodin has the potential to inhibit several angiogenic processes and that these effects may be related to suppression of the phosphorylation of ERK 1/2.

Int J Oncol. 2005 Sep;27(3):839-46.
Emodin suppresses hyaluronic acid-induced MMP-9 secretion and invasion of glioma cells.
Kim MS, Park MJ, Kim SJ, Lee CH, Yoo H, Shin SH, Song ES, Lee SH.
Emodin, an inhibitor of protein tyrosine kinase, possesses antiviral, immunosuppressive, anti-inflammatory and anticancer effects. In the present study, we investigated the effect of emodin on the hyaluronic acid (HA)-induced invasion of human glioma cells. Emodin significantly inhibited the HA-induced invasion through a Matrigel coated chamber, secretion of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2, and HA-induced secretion of MMP-9 in glioma cells. To investigate the possible mechanisms involved in these events, we performed Western blot analysis using phospho-specific antibodies, and found that emodin inhibited phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase (FAK), extracellular regulated protein kinase (ERK) 1/2 and Akt/PKB; emodin also suppressed the transcriptional activity of two transcription factors, activator protein-1 (AP-1) and nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB), in glioma cells. In addition, oral administration of emodin suppressed in vivo MMP secretion by glioma tumors in nude mice. Taken together, our results indicate that emodin can effectively inhibit HA-induced MMP secretion and invasion of glioma through inhibition of FAK, ERK1/2 and Akt/PKB activation and partial inhibition of AP-1 and NF-kappaB transcriptional activities. Consequently, these results provide important insights into emodin as an anti-invasive agent for the therapy of human glioma.

Food Chem Toxicol. 1991 Nov;29(11):765-70.
Effect of emodin on cooked-food mutagen activation.
Lee H, Tsai SJ.
The herbs Rheum palmatum B and Polygonum cuspidatum S are frequently used as laxatives and anticancer drugs in Chinese medicine. The antimutagenic activity of these herbs as well as their active component emodin was examined in Salmonella typhimurium TA98. The crude extracts and emodin induced a dose-dependent decrease in the mutagenicity of benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P), 2-amino-3-methylimidazo[4,5-f]quinoline (IQ) and 3-amino-1-methyl-5H-pyrido[4,3-b]indole (Trp-P-2). Furthermore, emodin reduced the mutagenicity of IQ by direct inhibition of the hepatic microsomal activation and not by interaction with proximate metabolites of IQ and/or by modification of DNA repair processes in the bacterial cell.

Int J Mol Med. 2005 Jul;16(1):41-7.
Regulatory effects of emodin on NF-kappaB activation and inflammatory cytokine expression in RAW 264.7 macrophages.
Li HL, Chen HL, Li H, Zhang KL, Chen XY, Wang XW, Kong QY, Liu J.
Emodin, an anthraquinones component of Rheum palmatun, has been used for anti-inflammatory purposes. However, its underlying molecular effect(s) on target cells remain to be well clarified. Thus, our current study was aimed at investigating the regulatory mechanism of emodin on liposaccharide-induced inflammatory responses in RAW 264.7 macrophages by RT-PCR, Western blot analysis, immunocytochemical staining and immunofluorescence analysis. It was found that a treatment of 20 microg/ml emodin inhibited the expression of a panel of inflammatory-associated genes, including TNFalpha, iNOS, IL-10, cytosolic IkappaBalpha, IKK-alpha and IKK-gamma, to different extents as well as the nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB (nuclear factor-kappaB). The promoting effect of emodin on the production and translocation of p105 (the precursor of NF-kappaB p50) was time-dependent and reached a maximum at 5 h. Our data suggest that emodin plays its anti-inflammatory roles by regulating inflammatory cytokines, specifically by suppressing NF-kappaB activation.

J Ethnopharmacol. 2007 Jul 25;112(3):552-6. Epub 2007 May 6.
Ameliorating effect of emodin, a constitute of Polygonatum multiflorum, on cycloheximide-induced impairment of memory consolidation in rats.
Lu MC, Hsieh MT, Wu CR, Cheng HY, Hsieh CC, Lin YT, Peng WH.
The aim of the present study was intended to investigate the ameliorating effects of emodin on memory consolidation via cholinergic, serotonergic and GABAergic neuronal systems in rats. First, we evaluated the ameliorating effects of emodin on cycloheximide (CXM)-induced impairment of passive avoidance response in rats. Secondly, we clarified the role of cholinergic, serotonergic or GABAergic system on the ameliorating effect of emodin by using 5-HT1A receptor partial agonist, 5-HT2 receptor antagonist, GABAB agonist, GABAA antagonist and muscarinic receptor antagonist. Emodin protected the rat from CXM-induced memory consolidation impairment. The beneficial effect of emodin on CXM-induced memory consolidation impairment was amplified by 8-OH-DPAT (5-HT1A receptor partial agonist) and ritanserin (5-HT2 receptor antagonist), but reduced by scopolamine. These results suggested that the beneficial effect of emodin on CXM-induced memory consolidation impairment was amplified by serotonergic 5-HT1A-receptor partial agonist and 5-HT2 receptor antagonist but reduced by muscarinic receptor antagonist.

Tohoku J Exp Med. 2008 May;215(1):61-9.
Emodin promotes atherosclerotic plaque stability in fat-fed apolipoprotein E-deficient mice.
Zhou M, Xu H, Pan L, Wen J, Guo Y, Chen K.
Increasing evidence indicated that plaque stabilization is attributed to the composition of the atherosclerotic plaque, and inflammation plays an important role in the formation and progress of vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque (VAP), which is prone to rupture. Emodin, an important component of traditional Chinese herb rhubarb, has obvious anti-inflammatory effect, although its effect on atherosclerotic plaque stabilization is unknown. Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) is an important component of plasma lipoprotein with anti-atherosclerosis function, and the plaque in the aorta of ApoE-deficient mice has been demonstrated with characteristics of VAP. Therefore, this study was designed to determine whether emodin can stabilize the VAP in the ApoE-deficient mice and explain the possible mechanism. After fat-fed for 13 weeks, mice were randomized into three groups (11 animals/group) and intragastrically administrated with emodin, simvastatin or distilled water for 13 weeks, respectively. The plaque stability was evaluated by the morphology and composition of atherosclerotic plaques. Additionally, the expression of peroxisomal proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPAR-gamma), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) in plaques was determined by the immunohistochemistry method. We showed that emodin could decrease the lipid core area and the ratio of lipid to collagen content in plaques. In addition, emodin significantly inhibited the expression of GM-CSF and MMP-9, whereas it induced the expression of PPAR-gamma in plaques. In conclusion, these results suggest that emodin can stabilize the VAP in the aortic root of ApoE-knockout mice, which is probably due to its anti-inflammatory effect.

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SuperHealing Milk Shake



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How to Make Fresh Squeezed Orange Juice



Juice Press used in video:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00015NN0S/ref=ox_sc_act_title_1?ie=UTF8&m=ATVPDKIKX0DER

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180 Program Testimonial – Rheumatoid Arthritis

Feedback from 180 Program Graduate

RA
Hey I wanted to let you know that I am doing really well with the RA and sticking with the diet.  My symptoms are almost gone (seems to be getting a little better every week).  Even my most troubled finger is very good with a little swelling just in the morning but still that is pretty good.  My left foot also is almost completely normal all the time.  All together great improvement – thanks again!

If you’d like to learn more about supporting your metabolism with food, FPS offers free nutrition consultations and a 12 week nutritional program for both local (Southern California) and distance clients. Please contact Rob for more details – Rob@functionalps.com.

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180 Program Testimonial – Rheumatoid Arthritis, Energy, Mood, Food Cravings

Feedback from a 180 Nutrition Program Graduate

Inflammation, Thyroid
I experienced several benefits from the program, but the two primary benefits were:

1. I’m 99.9% RA pain free using Ray Peat recommendations.
2. It helped increase my thyroid function by increasing my temperature 2°.

Energy, Mood, and Cravings
My energy level increased tremendously.  I no longer feel fatigue at all even near the beginning of my menstrual cycle.  I only experience normal tiredness.  My appetite decreased.  I do not feel hungry when I sip on the milk shake during the day.  I no longer experience sugar cravings.  I notice I can focus for longer periods of time without burn out.  My emotional balance has tremendously changed.  I experience less fearfulness and worry.  I approach problems in a more rational logical manner.  I do not dwell on issues.  I experience less depression.  I am no longer highly emotional.

If you’d like to learn more about supporting your metabolism with food, FPS offers free nutrition consultations and a 12 week nutritional program for both local (Southern California) and distance clients. Please contact Rob for more details – Rob@functionalps.com.

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180 Program Testimonial – Salt, Food Cravings, Gelatin

Feedback from a 180 Nutrition Program Graduate

Salt Improves Circulation
Last few years, traveling on the plane was becoming so uncomfortable for me. After 13 hour flights to Japan, my legs get so puffy. It used to be easier to get rid of this problem after the flight when I was younger, I just had to walk around, and within an hour or so it was gone. But as I got older it got worse, and I have to suffer as long as 3 days after the flight.

I had a flight to Japan in March, first time since I started this program. I was so amazed that my legs didn’t get puffy at all?!! I didn’t even need to put my legs up. I read my book and ate light, slept a little. All those were so much easier.

Better Choices, No Cravings
I finally learned the way of controlling my weight down while I eat and feel great. I used to have addiction to the bread, pasta and rice, also cakes of course. When I found out stopping those were the key to controlling the excessive eating, I was not sure that if I could do this program. Well, it was not as hard as I thought it was going to be because eating fruit with meal made me feel satisfied, and I felt so much lighter and felt better after the meals. I didn’t miss those complex carb nearly as much as when I did when I was on Atkin’s diet which I failed every time I tried. This program showed me how to get off my roller coaster ride.

All sounds too good, but it happened. I am happier, lighter, and healthier!! Just to let you know that I haven’t got a cold since I started this program.

Gelatin and Inflammation
I have been jogging everyday over 13 years now. Luckily I haven’t had any major injury, although my joints started to hurt a little when I woke up. But now, I get out of my bed and start moving like when I was young or even better. I think the gelatin helped me a lot.

The gelatin helped my son too. He had partially tore his ACL last September, he was just starting playing for Varsity basketball and he was just peaking, then he hurt his ACL. Rob introduced us to the Gelatin and the bone broth. (Actually this was how I was introduced to this program.) My son Noah took 4 weeks off but he was ready to play for the season. After 6 months passed, yesterday my son’s coach came up to me and told me that he is amazed my son’s recovery.

If you’d like to learn more about supporting your metabolism with food, FPS offers free nutrition consultations and a 12 week nutritional program for both local (Southern California) and distance clients. Please contact Rob for more details – Rob@functionalps.com.

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Don’t Be Conned By The Resveratrol Scam

by Dr Raymond Peat

A year ago GlaxoSmithKline bought Sirtris, a company focusing on the biological effects of resveratrol, for $720,000,000. Harvard Medical School’s website, and broadcasts by Barbara Walters and Morley Safer have publicized resveratrol as a longevity-increasing drug, and millions of people are spending large amounts of money for resveratrol capsules.

The main claim being made about resveratrol is that it can mimic the anti-aging effects of calorie restriction, without having to restrict food consumption. This involves silencing genes, blocking their production of RNA and protein.

The mass media and some medical journals aren’t giving a balanced description of the biological effects of resveratrol, but many biologists are being influenced too, by the same simple arguments that the television reporters summarized. The academic biology culture, the medical culture, and the basic American culture itself, are all permeated by the idea of genetic determinism, so when a DNA molecule in yeast is identified as the “anti-aging gene,” and a molecule is found that activates it, that molecule, or something similar, seems to them clearly to be an anti-aging drug.

Part of the cultural framework that makes it easy to sell that idea is the old “rate of living” theory of aging, the idea that we have only so many heartbeats in a lifetime, that we can use only so many calories and so much oxygen in a lifetime, and that organisms with a low metabolic rate therefore live longer than those with a high metabolic rate. The rate of living theory is closely related to the “wear and tear” theory of aging, that our bodies are (except for our germ cells) made up of “post-mitotic cells,” unable to continue dividing once growth is complete, and so must die when those cells are “worn out.” By the middle of the 20th century, those ideas had been disproved in many ways, but in the 1960s Leonard Hayflick renewed for a time the doctrine of aging as the wearing out of unrenewable cells, with his doctrine that somatic cells (non-germ cells) have an absolute limit of 50 replications. Producing cloned animals from somatic cells, and the subsequent excitement about stem cells, made that theory obsolete (again).

The “longevity gene,” named Sir2 in yeasts, worms, and flies (its equivalent in mammals is called SirT1), is activated by restricting calories, and caloric restriction is known to extend lifespan (though the restriction of certain nutrients can similarly increase longevity, without restricting calories). Both semi-starvation and increased activity of the Sir2 gene can prevent obesity, and obesity has some harmful effects. The promoters of the theory suggest that a resveratrol-like drug will be able to prevent obesity and cure type-2 diabetes. They are also suggesting that it could slow aging and increase longevity.

Talking about the “aging” of a single-celled organism such as yeast, and drawing conclusions about the aging of multicellular organisms and humans, from events in the life of yeast, is meaningful only to people who subscribe to the Hayflick doctrine, and who deny the reality of stem cells in mammals and other complex organisms. They are actually talking about the “fertility,” the reproductive growth capacity, of the yeasts. The study of yeast metabolism and growth developed mostly in relation to the needs of the wine and beer industries, and that has biased ideas about the ways yeast adapts to changing ecosystems. Yeasts adapt their reproductive strategy to the perceived adequacy of their environment. An individual yeast cell coordinates its physiology with the surrounding cells, in ways analogous to the ways individual cells in an animal participate in the coherence of the organism.

As in higher organisms, stress can accelerate the reproductive process in yeast. In animals, stress can cause precocious puberty, as if they were being exposed to an excess of estrogen. Resveratrol is a defensive fungicidal antibiotic, or phytoalexin, so it’s reasonable that it would be perceived as a stressor by yeast. It is also a phytoestrogen, and for many years yeasts have been known to be responsive to estrogenic substances. To the brewing industry, these effects of phytoestrogens are known to influence the biomass, but when the rate of growth is considered to represent aging, then increased biomass is equivalent to increased longevity.

Anyone familiar with the last 40 years of yeast research would presumably know that phenolic phytoalexins are estrogenic, and that the growth of yeast is influenced by estrogenic substances, and also that estrogenic substances such as resveratrol could be very dangerous if consumed in exaggeratedly large amounts.

Resveratrol is a stilbene, similar in structure to diethylstilbestrol, DES, the famously toxic-carcinogenic pharmaceutical. Estrogens affect all of the systems affected by resveratrol, and for 67 years, the estrogen industry has been telling the public that whatever estrogen does is beneficial—more than 200 medical conditions have been benefited by estrogen treatment, according to the medical literature/pharmaceutical advertising.

Many people have been asserting that the reason calorie restriction can extend life is that it activates “the antiaging gene, Sir2.” A recent publication (Carrano, et al., 2009) from the Salk institute proposes that two other genes are responsible for calorie-restriction longevity in the roundworm, C. elegans.

But restricting calories has a multitude of effects–Sir2 is only one of hundreds of genes that function differently in hunger-stressed animals. Calorie restriction is stressful, but the nature of that stress and the response to it depends on the whole situation, just as in any other challenging situation.

One problem with the Sirtris scheme is that increased Sir2 activity shortens the actual chronological lifespan of non-dividing yeast (Kennedy, et al., 2005; Fabrizio, et al., 2005). In animals, increasing the activity of SirT1 might contribute to the development of cancer (Liu, et al., 2009). It might also be involved in Alzheimer’s disease, and the replacement of nerve cells in the brain with astrocytes or other glial cells. Gliosis can occur in normal aging, but inflammation can produce extreme degrees of fibrosis of the brain or spongy encephalopathy. Estrogens also have this effect of accelerating stem cell production of glial cells.

In a recent study, to determine whether resveratrol would slow the heart rate and lower the body temperature in mice (as expected according to the rate of aging doctrine), those metabolic indicators were depressed by resveratrol for one day, but then returned to normal. However, the endurance of the mice on a treadmill was reduced by the resveratrol treatment (Mayers, et al., 2009).

Going beyond the Sir2 gene-based argument, many researchers have examined resveratrol’s effects on various other genes. Too often, it seems that the authors reason that whatever resveratrol does to those genes must be good for the organism. These arguments seem to be following the reasoning that has been systematically used to promote estrogen and polyunsaturated fats.

If we consider the effects of resveratrol in the context of the well established facts about the metabolic processes associated with long life, we will notice many things that should lead to skepticism about the claims being made by the advertisers.

A little stress can make an organism more resistant to subsequent stresses. However, resveratrol fails to extend the lifespan of normal mice, being effective only in a strain of mice that becomes abnormally fat on a normal diet.

About 40 years ago, when people first began promoting fish oil as a longevity factor, Alex Comfort watched the rats that were being given the fish oil in their food. The food smelled bad, and the rats ate it only when they were very hungry, so they ate less and were leaner than the animals that were getting the standard diet. Their increased longevity was the result of avoiding obesity.

In a long-term study at NIH, rhesus monkeys are being studied to learn whether calorie restriction extends the lifespan of primates, as it does certain (genetically fat) rodents. The monkeys are kept in small cages. Confinement causes severe stress. Rats that are allowed to bite something while restrained suffer less physical stress, fewer ulcers, and are more able to maintain normal body temperature. Restraint normally lowers body temperature, lowering thyroid and increasing cortisol.

Eating in response to stress ameliorates some of the hormonal changes, but the monkeys that are permitted to eat as much as they want during their life of confinement have become very obese. They look much less agitated than the low calorie monkeys, and their body temperatures are higher.

The rate-of-living doctrine causes the researchers to reason that the low-calorie diet is slowing the rate of aging by lowering their body temperature. However, their metabolic rate, per gram of non-fat tissue, hasn’t decreased.

An important difference that has been observed is that the chromosomes of the calorie deprived monkeys have more defects.

Nitric oxide, which is promoted by resveratrol, according to numerous publications (Klinge, et al., 2008; Gresele, et al. 2008; Gan, et al., 2009), and estrogens (acting partly through nitric oxide), including some phytoestrogens, causes chromosomal damage (Banerjee and Banerjee, 1994; Kulling, et al., 1999) which contributes to cancer and possibly to birth defects. Nitric oxide has been proposed to be a major factor in causing the degenerative diseases of aging.

If these monkey experiments have any relevance to human biology, it is to demonstrate that prolonged torture by confinement and food restriction causes bodily damage, in the form of chromosomal abnormalities. But unless the next generation of monkeys is examined for birth defects and other problems, the full meaning of the experiment won’t be apparent.

In some of the publications claiming that resveratrol increases lifespan, it was reported that niacinamide had the opposite effect, suppressing Sir2, the longevity gene, and shortening the organism’s lifespan. To put their claims into context, it’s helpful to look at a variety of experiments involving treatment with niacinamide.

It protects nerves, vascular cells, insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, and a variety of other types of cell from cell death produced by lack of oxygen, excitotoxicity, endotoxin, and a variety of stressors and toxins. (Niacinamide acts in many ways as a negation of resveratrol; for example, resveratrol interferes with the ability of the beta cells to secrete insulin [Szkudelski, 2007]).

Niacinamide protects mitochondrial respiration from many of the age-related factors that can damage mitochondria and decrease energy production. Lipopolysaccharide, the bacterial endotoxin, increases the production of the free radical nitric oxide, leading to the secretion of inflammatory mediators and the suppression of energy production by the mitochondria. These effects are blocked by niacinamide (Fukuzawa, et al., 1997). Calorie restriction also protects mitochondrial respiration, in yeasts (Lin, et al., 2002) and rats (Broderick, et al., 2002)

The “replicative lifespan” of human cells in vitro is extended by treatment with niacinamide (Kang, et al., 2006).

In an experiment with human keratinocytes in vitro, resveratrol had the opposite effect, reducing their ability to divide (Blander, et al., 2009). By the definitions of “aging” used by the advocates of the rate-of-living theory, this experiment suggests that resveratrol causes premature aging. Estrogen has a similar effect on keratinocytes. Resveratrol, nitric oxide, and estrogen, unlike niacinamide, suppress mitochondrial respiration. Resveratrol inhibits the formation of progesterone (Chen, et al., 2007), which is synthesized in mitochondria.

The NIH researchers reported that the food deprived monkeys (contrary to their expectation) didn’t have a lower rate of metabolism, but many experiments done with a variety of very different animals through much of the last century found that a higher metabolic rate corresponded to increased longevity. Within a given species of bird or mammal, the higher rate of metabolism is often associated with a higher body temperature,

But when different types of animal of very different sizes are compared, smaller animals may have a higher rate of metabolism, but a shorter lifespan, than a larger animal, as in the case of mice and elephants. This example was used recently by an endocrinologist, Martin Surks, to argue against treating “subclinical hypothyroidism.” He suggests that hypothyroid people, who have a lower rate of metabolism than euthyroid people, are likely to live longer, because their metabolism is analogous to the slow metabolism of elephants, rather than the fast metabolism of mice.

Comparing animals of different species, such as birds, monkeys, and rodents, of similar sizes, those with the highest metabolic rate are likely to have the longest average and maximum lifespans.

The smaller an organism is, the more easily it loses heat to the environment. Most of a mouse’s metabolic energy is spent simply maintaining its body temperature. Large animals have less surface area in proportion to their mass, so they spend relatively little energy in temperature regulation.

One of the ideas deeply associated with the rate-of-living theory of aging is that our metabolic energy is spent mainly for regulating the concentration of salts and other substances in cells, with a small amount used for secretion, movement, and–a relatively recent admission–for thought.

Gilbert Ling has demonstrated the falsity of the idea that “membrane pumps” regulate the concentratons of dissolved materials, and showed that the amount of energy needed to operate them constantly is much greater than the metabolic capacity of any organism.

The fact that those “membrane-based” energy consuming processes don’t exist leaves a lot of energy to be accounted for. One of the main energy-consuming activities of a cell is just being alive, that is, adapting, sensing, responding, anticipating, orienting itself to its environment. Except in very special circumstances, the substance of a cell is in constant motion, and the molecules are being consumed and reconstructed, in a process of continuous renewal. These intracellular streams of renewal of molecules and organelles are paralleled on the scale of tissues and organs by a process of renewal, in which new cells are born and unnecessary cells are dissolved.

Part of the “rate of living” relates to the rate of renewal of the organism. Another part relates to issues such as the loss of heat, that makes life shorter and harder for very small animals.

The end product of respiration is carbon dioxide, and it is an essential component of the life process. The ability to produce and retain enough carbon dioxide is as important for longevity as the ability to conserve enough heat to allow chemical reactions to occur as needed.

Carbon dioxide protects cells in many ways. By bonding to amino groups, it can inhibit the glycation of proteins during oxidative stress, and it can limit the formation of free radicals in the blood; inhibition of xanthine oxidase is one mechanism (Shibata, et al., 1998). It can reduce inflammation caused by endotoxin/LPS, by lowering the formation of tumor necrosis factor, IL-8 and other promoters of inflammation (Shimotakahara, et al., 2008). It protects mitochondria (Lavani, et al., 2007), maintaining (or even increasing) their ability to respire during stress.

The “replicative lifespan” of a cell can be shortened by factors like resveratrol or estrogen that interfere with mitochondrial production of carbon dioxide. Both of those chemicals cause skin cells, keratinocytes, to stop dividing, to take up calcium, and to begin producing the horny material keratin, that allows superficial skin cells to form an effective barrier. This process normally occurs as these cells differentiate from the basal (stem) cells and, by multiplying, move farther outward away from the underlying blood vessels that provide the nutrients that are oxidized to form carbon dioxide, and as they get farther from the blood supply, they get closer to the external air, which contains less than 1% as much CO2 as the blood. This normally causes their eventual hardening into the keratin cells, but when conditions are optimal, numerous layers of moist, translucent cells that give the skin the characteristic appearance of youth, will be retained between the basal cells and the condensed surface layers. (Wilke, et al., 1988)

In other types of tissue, a high level of carbon dioxide has a similar stabilizing effect on cells, preserving stem cells, limiting stress and preventing loss of function. In the lining of the mouth, where the oxygen tension is lower, and carbon dioxide higher, the cells don’t form as much keratin as the skin cells do. In the uterus, the lining cells would behave similarly, except that estrogen stimulates keratinization. A vitamin A deficiency mimics an estrogen excess, and can cause excessive keratinization of membrane cells.

Yeasts adapt their physiology and life cycle to their particular ecological situation. The cells within an animal behave analogously, but that is likely to be forgotten or denied, because of the culture of genetic determinism.

The cells in each organ and tissue of the body are arranged in ways that allow them to make their contribution to the function of the organism, while receiving oxygen, glucose, and regulatory substances in the blood, and maintaining and renewing themselves. Except for the skin, their situation amid other cells assures that they will live in a high concentration of carbon dioxide.

There are proteins (uncoupling proteins, UCP) that cause the mitochondria to increase their consumption of oxygen without increasing their synthesis of ATP. The synthesis of ATP is usually thought of as the main reason for the consumption of oxygen, so the UCP have been assumed to exist to increase heat production. The formation of carbon dioxide is usually thought of as just an unavoidable consequence. UCP proteins, however, exist in situations in which heat production doesn’t seem appropriate (Borecký & Vercesi, 2005; Aguilera, et al., 2005; Gnanalingham, et al., 2005). For example, fasting or calorie restriction increases UCP, tending to cause tissues to consume energy more rapidly. Stress and hypoxia also can increase UCP, suggesting that these enzymes have protective functions.

Increasing the formation of carbon dioxide seems to me to be the essential function of the UCP. Thyroid hormone (T3) increases UCP, and UCP increases the formation of new mitochondria. Increased activity of the UCP is closely associated with increased lifespan. A decreased amount of T3 in tissues during aging corresponds to decreasing mitochondrial functon.

Increased CO2 inhibits the formation of lactate, decreases the lipolytic effect of adrenaline, and the lowered energy charge produced by the UCP would prevent the diversion of glucose into other uses.

According to the rate-of-living theory of aging, the “post-mitotic” organism ages and degenerates in proportion to the rate at which it metabolizes. Leonard Hayflick, to demonstrate that it is cell division, not the passage of time, that ages cells, put some cells in a freezer, while others, from the same batch, were kept in a warm incubator and allowed to go through their allotted number of divisions. When the warm, growing cells had approached 50 replications and began dying “of old age,” the other cells were taken out of the freezer, and they were able to divide as well as they had before being frozen. The implication was that slowing metabolism was the only way to extend the lifespan.

These beliefs have allowed people to view the metabolism, the turnover of substance and cells, of a tissue such as bone, as indicating breakdown, weakening, and loss. For many years, it was impossible to show any beneficial effect of estrogen on the bones of experimental animals or people, but then it was discovered that it could slow the metabolism of the osteoclasts, reducing the rate of turnover in the bones. This was propagandistically effective.

The estrogen industry’s funding greatly reinforced the rate-of-living theory of aging, and metabolic markers of bone turnover began to be used to measure the effects of treatment. Thyroid hormone (the active T3 hormone) increases the rate of turnover of all tissues, including bone, so by reference to the “bone protective effects of estrogen,” the argument was made that thyroid supplementation should be reduced, to prevent osteoporosis (despite animal studies showing that T3 increases bone development). Since hypothyroidism usually involves increased thyroid stimulating hormone, TSH, the argument was extended by showing that TSH lowers bone turnover.

One factor involved in the increased production of TSH in hypothyroidism is that the low metabolic rate allows estrogen to accumulate, leading to increased serotonin production. Serotonin stimulates both TSH and prolactin. Serotonin and prolactin both happen to cause bone loss. They increase nitric oxide, which inhibits mitochondrial respiration. Serotonin increases a cytokine, osteoprotegerin, that inhibits osteoclasts, reducing bone turnover. However, serotonin’s other antimetabolic effects outweigh that effect, and it is a major factor in causing osteoporosis. The antimetabolic factors that slow the rate of living also slow the rate of renewal, and on balance lead to tissue atrophy, fibrosis, inflammation, and degeneration. Several decades after estrogen-induced prolactin might have been recognized as a cause of bone loss in aging, a few people are mentioning the mechanism in specific situations (Horner, 2009; Horner, et al., 2007).

With aging, metabolic activity and the turnover of biological substance decrease. Organelles such as mitochondria are renewed every day or two, much of the brain substance has a similarly fast rate of turnover, and other parts of the body are renewed more slowly. When conditions are optimal, the new structures are flawless, but under the wrong conditions, faulty repairs can accumulate, producing the degenerative problems of aging.

Our culture’s understanding of biology has been shaped by a series of ideologies, and currently the drug industry is the main force shaping those ideologies, creating an attitude that’s receptive to their products.

The huge marketing campaign for resveratrol will have direct effects on people’s health, probably extending beyond the generation that uses it, but it is also polluting the culture by reinforcing the doctrine that torpor, slowing the life process, is beneficial.

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http://doctorsaredangerous.com/articles/dont_be_conned_by_the_resveratrol_scam.htm

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Energy, structure, and carbon dioxide: A realistic view of the organism

by Ray Peat, PhD

“But the philosophy of Causes & Consequences misled Lavater as it has all his Contemporaries. Each thing is its own cause & its own effect.”
W. Blake, c. 1788


What could be more important to understand than biological energy? Thought, growth, movement, every philosophical and practical issue involves the nature of biological energy.

The question of biological energy is usually handled in the manner of the cosmologist who explained that the earth rests on the back of an elephant; when asked what the elephant stood on, the cosmologist replied that “it’s elephants all the way down.” Several decades ago, it was discovered that ATP mediates many processes in the energized cell, but there is still fundamental disagreement on the question of how ATP is synthesized, and how its energy is used to produce movement, to control the movement of water in cells and organs and to regulate the ionic balance of cells and fluids, and even why its absence produces rigor mortis.

When people actually try to examine the question of how the “high energy bond” of ATP can be transformed into usable energy, they sometimes find that it is easier to propose fundamental changes in the laws of physics than to find an explanation within ordinary physics and chemistry. (For example, Physiologie 1986 Jan-Mar;23(1):65-8, “The non-conservation of parity in the domain of elementary particles and a possible mechanism for the delivery of energy from the ATP molecule,” Portelli, C.) More often, biologists simply prefer not to go beyond the first or second elephant.

However, there is a way of looking at the nature of life that doesn’t involve mythical beings. The writing of history, in science as in politics, is often an ad hoc convenience, usually done to achieve maximum self-justification. When Harry Truman announced that he had dropped an atomic bomb on “Hiroshima, a military base,” he was revising, for a moment, the history and geography of Japan. Usually, fictional histories created by powerful institutions become part of a general culture, and are relatively permanent. “Scientific revolutions” and “paradigm shifts” are just tardy acknowledgments of the silliness of the ruling fiction. In the process of accepting a slightly more rational way of doing things, those who have reluctantly given up the old doctrine will look for ways to show that they were on the right track all the time, that all of the nonsense was necessary. They want to maintain the illusion that scientists are intelligent and rational, for the same reason politicians want to create the illusion that they are just and wise. Television networks and newspapers agree that genocide is exactly where the president says it is, because they and the president have common interests; likewise, science journals and textbooks are there to protect the orthodox beliefs of institutionalized science, much more than to search for truth. For historical doctrinaire reasons, Aristotle’s ideas and the culture that had been built up around them were practically eliminated from Anglo-American culture a few hundred years ago. In Aristotle’s “formative principle,” nature itself was creative and purposive, “teleological.” His ideas, and the people who held similar ideas, were suppressed because of the dangerously democratic implications seen in them by the ruling classes. Since Ilya Prigogine’s Nobel Prize, a false cultural history of “emergence” has been formulated, to derive the idea of the sudden appearance of order out of disorder, from the official anti-teleological (platonistic) rationalism that had seen change as a matter of random fluctuations in a time-reversible system, in which numbers are real and substance is unreal. In this new version of history, cybernetics is blended with neodarwinism, to explain order as something external to matter, and dependent on chance rather than purpose.

Since I was following N.A. Kozyrev’s work (on stellar and planetary energy) from the late fifties through the sixties, I thought of volcanism as a process essentially equivalent to solar energy. Then, in 1968, I read Sidney Fox’s experiments with heated amino acids, and saw that volcanism was a more appropriate energy than sunlight for driving the origin of life. In some of his experiments, Fox put nearly dry amino acids onto hot volcanic rocks, and when he added a little water, the amino acids polymerized spontaneously, and nonrandomly, into peptide chains; when these were put into water, they spontaneously formed microspheres, that looked like, and behaved very much like, bacteria. Fox saw his work as a validation of the principle that nature itself created higher order spontaneously.

Deep in the volcanic earth, or deep in the ocean, life would be protected from destructive ultraviolet radiation, whether or not the atmosphere contained enough oxygen/ozone to screen out that radiation. And thinking about volcanoes, I questioned the idea that life had to originate in the “reducing atmosphere” that was dogmatically required by the conventional protobiologists. Volcanoes emit water, carbon dioxide, and a variety of strong oxidants. I think it is possible that atmospheric oxygen preceded green plants.

If Sidney Fox’s spontaneously formed proteins and microspheres are similar to the original living cells, these forms of life appearing in volcanic seeps would have originated in an environment rich in carbon dioxide, and I have gradually come to imagine that the present ordinary respiration based on oxygen might have originated as an adaptation to an environment deficient in carbon dioxide, as life spread out from its volcanic origins.

The history linking volcanic life to contemporary sun-based life is still in doubt, but in outline we can think of the sun as a present energy source, and the chemistry of the earth as, relatively, an energy sink. Electrons activated by light energy from the sun give up that energy, as they move through various steps until they combine with oxygen. Energy flow, in this sense, is somewhat like the energy flow between the negative and the positive poles of a battery; ultimately, it produces heat, but in the process, it can produce work.

Life interposes itself between the “poles” of energy flow, and the flowing energy creates organization and structure, as it is dissipated into heat. Structures store some of the energy, and tend to increase in complexity, taking advantage of the flow of energy to create phase differences with expanded internal surfaces, like a finely mixed emulsion. Like a finely divided emulsion, the more highly energized the organism is, the stabler it is. It adapts to the available energy; energy is used in adaptation; the structures built with the energy are adaptive structures.

This idea of the development of organismic complexity as a response to conditions that are “far from equilibrium” was first clearly stated by V.I. Vernadsky, about 80 years ago, but now the idea is associated with Ilya Prigogine. The only difference is that Prigogine has inserted an element of indeterminacy, which seems to have ideological appeal for much of the academic world.

In Fox’s production of the proteinoid microspheres, the ordered growth is a consequence of the properties of the substance in a permissive environment. The order is not imposed from the outside onto passive matter. When Darwin was a university student, he accepted Paley’s doctrine of “Natural Theology,” in which a watchmaker god inserted design into the material world. As he matured, he allowed for a certain Lamarckian intrinsic process of ordering, but he emphasized the role of natural selection, in which the design was imposed by the environment, in the same way that animal or plant breeders use artificial selection to impose the traits they want. The neodarwinist movement “corrected” Darwin, putting all of the responsibility for the “design” of organisms onto the natural selection of strictly random variations. The cybernetic culture is having a strong influence on neodarwinism, and some of the new histories of science that are being written are trying to place the design process on the abstract mathematical level, rather than looking for it in the nature of substances. Devotees of “chaos theory” would entirely displace the designing principle from the material world. The meaning, and the effects, of this process of mathematizing neodarwinism are antagonistic to the facts demonstrated by Sidney Fox’s experiments, and are tending to move research farther away from the creative nature of life.

Despite the present emphasis in “nonlinear dynamics” on random fluctuations and instabilities, the fact is that complex organisms, and finely mixed emulsions, are very stable, and the direction of their development is essentially determinate. Vernadsky described this fact as a law of evolution, that organisms and systems would tend toward the production of a high metabolic rate and large size. This means that evolution tends toward a maximum of energy use, a maximum of adaptive structures. The brain is the dominant organ of adaptation, and the evolutionary tendency toward “cephalization” is an illustration of Vernadsky’s law.

The stability of the fine emulsion, or of the evolved organism (a person has greater homeostatic powers than a rat), involves the fact that, within a given range of available energy, the very complex structure has dissipated the energy within itself to a high degree. Every point of the system has come very close to being in equilibrium. It’s a situation analogous to that of a road that climbs a mountain with a nearly infinite number of switchbacks—as the number of switchbacks tends toward a maximum, the slope of the road at any point tends toward a minimum.

Mammalian cells are smaller than frog cells; we are like a well homogenized emulsion, compared to animals with lower rates of metabolism. An unstimulated cell is practically in equilibrium with its environment. This is the “high energy resting state.” Activity generates structure, but when a cell is inactive, it is stable and doesn’t have to expend energy. This is exactly contrary to the doctrine in which a “cell membrane” maintains the cell’s organization by a constant expenditure of energy, running “pumps” to maintain differences in the ions and dissolved substances on the opposite sides of the membrane. In that doctrine, each cell, even at rest, is far from equilibrium; life is a struggle, and the cell must spend energy even to stay as it is. Gilbert Ling showed that the concept of membrane pumps to preserve the cell’s order is both unnecessary and impossible. In the real organism, energy is spent to grow, to adapt, and to evolve, but not to merely persist.

If we understand Sidney Fox’s spontaneously formed microspheres, I think we will get some insights into our own cells. For example, the microspheres have a remarkable uniformity of size, which they preserve even during growth, by dividing instead of simply enlarging. They tend to assemble into orderly chains, without coalescing with each other. They are stable in warm water, but dissolve in cold water. This indicates that the hydrophobic, “fatty” quality of the proteins, causes them to be expelled from the bulk water, forcing them into association with each other. Cold water has greater tolerance for fatty substances. The proteins, however, also contain regions that are water soluble, and when the proteins assemble into droplets, they continue to associate with a certain amount of water. This water is now “dissolved in the protein,” in the sense that the properties of the protein are relatively dominant. (Bungenberg de Jong’s studies of “complex coacervates” are still the best introduction to this subject.)

The modern practice of biochemists has been to extract soluble substances from cells, and to study them in dilute watery solutions, and then to believe that the things they observe in the test tube are the real properties of cells, of the “dilute solutions enclosed in a lipid membrane.” If I hadn’t had the experience of talking to dozens of biochemists who believed that no other kind of biochemistry was conceivable, I would find it hard to imagine that something like this could exist in a culture that defines itself as “scientific.”

Small particles have a large surface area in proportion to their mass. The balance, within the proteins, between hydrophilic and hydrophobic groups, will determine the proportion of surface area in contact with the bulk solvent water, relative to the mass of the microsphere droplet. More hydrophilic proteins will form smaller droplets, and at a certain point of hydrophilicity, will no longer form droplets. The temperature, by altering the structure of the water, interacts with the hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity of the protein. Structures are generated as complex physical equilibria are achieved.

In our own cells, the microtubules, which are a part of the cell framework involved in cell division and movement, are dissolved at low temperatures, and are reformed when the temperature is raised. Some enzymes have this same temperature sensitivity. Since the water which is “dissolved in the proteins” of the cell is largely dominated by the proteins, its actions on microtubules and enzymes and other proteins will reflect both temperature and the influences of proteins and a variety of dissolved substances. Estrogen, for example, promotes the formation of microtubules, at a given temperature, as if it had made the water “wetter,” or warmer.

When cells are stimulated, they adapt, with substance flowing into complexification until an approximate, appropriate equilibrium is reached. Stimulation is a need, and an opportunity, for adaptation and differentiation. If there is a need for adaptation, without the necessary substance and energy, the cell or organism will either deteriorate or withdraw.

Polyunsaturated fats with inappropriate structure interfere with these adaptive flows of energy and substance in all of the known systems of cellular response. These exogenous substances suppress the respiratory energy system, the intercellular communication systems, and the intracellular response systems. Immunodeficiency, autoimmunity, inflammatory diseases, aging, cancer, heart disease, nervous diseases, and hormonal imbalances are produced when these fats interfere with the spontaneous self-regulatory processes of the organism.

When respiration is suppressed, the cell’s production of carbon dioxide is suppressed. If we start with the best known example of carbon dioxide’s effect on a protein, the Haldane-Bohr effect on hemoglobin, we will have a model for visualizing what happens to organisms in an environment that is poor in carbon dioxide, but rich in vegetable-derived unsaturated fats. Carbon dioxide associates with protein in a variety of ways, but the best understood association is its reaction with an amino group, to form a carbamino group. In the presence of a large amount of carbon dioxide, the hemoglobin molecule changes its shape slightly, along with its electronic balance, in a way that favors the release of oxygen. The opposite happens in the presence of a high concentration of oxygen and a lower concentration of carbon dioxide. Other factors can modify the effects of these gases on hemoglobin’s shape, electronic properties, and its binding affinities. Wherever there is lysine or other free amino group (practically every protein and peptide), carbon dioxide can be expected to react with it to some degree, which will depend on other things in the environment. Lysine also reacts with sugars, so there is a competition between CO2 and glucose. In aging and diabetes, many proteins are altered by the inappropriate binding to sugars. There are enzymes which can remove sugars that have altered proteins, but these enzymes are inhibited by the presence of small fragments of starch molecules.

The absence of carbon dioxide bound to a protein is likely to have an effect on the protein’s structure and function, but the presence of a relatively large sugar molecule, in a site normally occupied by carbon dioxide, will have drastic effects on the protein, including tending to solublize it, and to cause it to associate with its environment in other abnormal ways. In general, the presence or absence of carbon dioxide involves relatively quick and subtle changes in structure and function, analogous to the phosphorylation of proteins, but possibly competitive with it, while the presence and absence of sugars, as glycated or glycosylated proteins, tends to be relatively permanent, and to require enzymes to restore the original state. Carbon dioxide’s regulatory effects have been studied in only a few enzymes and hormones, but there is enough evidence to show that its reactions with proteins and peptides constitute a major regulatory system.

The formation of carbon dioxide itself, from organic materials, has recently been demonstrated to provide the energy for synthesizing ATP. (Arch Microbiol 1998 Aug;170(2):69-77, “Energy conservation in the decarboxylation of dicarboxylic acids by fermenting bacteria,” Dimroth P, Schink B.)

Around 1970, someone used a new technique that etched away the surface of a red blood cell, revealing an interior that was obviously highly structured, partitioned into orderly segments, but when I talked to biology professors, they still believed that a red blood cell was “just a bag of hemoglobin, enclosed in a lipid membrane.” One of my biochemistry professors, who was smart enough to have opinions of his own, in private sarcastically referred to the “lipid bilayer membrane” as “the fat sandwich theory.” But it would be several years before it became socially acceptable to talk about the cell’s internal framework. Early in the century, before electron microscopes existed, a biologist had inserted tiny particles of carbon into cells under the microscope, and described their movement as they fell through the cytoplasm as resembling the movement of a pebble falling through a brush pile; it was obvious that the clear cytoplasm was highly structured. The same biologist also rearranged the organelles within the cell, and demonstrated that they spontaneously returned to their normal positions. The cytoplasm can flow like a liquid, but it has some of the properties of a highly organized solid.

When I moved a microelectrode through a cell, using an apparatus that could move it forward or backward in very small increments, I found that the voltage fluctuated with the location in the cell, and that withdrawing or advancing the electrode, each location would show the same voltage as before, when the electrode returned. This meant that, even electrically, the cytoplasm was behaving as a solid, not as a liquid. According to the “membrane theory” of the cell, the liquid part of the cytoplasm has to have the same voltage in all of its parts.

In that doctrine of a cell as “a drop of water containing dissolved molecules enclosed by a membrane,” biochemists were required to think that enzyme-catalyzed reactions are governed by random collisions of the substances reacting with the enzymes, and that only a few properties of the solution, such as temperature, pH, and ionic strength, would have any influence on the behavior of the enzyme. Their doctrine seemed tenable to them, at the beginning of the 1970s, only because they had an essentially unscientific attitude that refused to consider the evidence, on the basis that valid evidence couldn’t disagree with their position. In the case of hemoglobin, the idea that substances bound to the protein molecule could change its chemical and physical properties was accepted, and by analogy with that, additional “allosteric” (shape-changing) enzymes were beiing studied.

But, because of the commitments made to the “membrane enclosed cytoplasm” theory, the structural proteins were for a long time treated according to the rules established for enzyme chemistry—only local, random interactions were considered to govern their behavior.

In the 1950s, Gilbert Ling introduced a model of the cytoplasm that took account of its observable features. He called it the “Association-Induction” hypothesis. He proposed that substances such as ATP, hormones, and ions participated in cell physiology according to the ways that they associated with proteins and water, and that a powerfully adsorbed molecule, such as ATP, would influence the structural proteins in the cytoplasm as “cardinal adsorbants,” altering the proteins’ affinity for other adsorbed substances, such as potassium and sodium. The behavior of hemoglobin was a model for the behavior of the cytoplasm and its components. Unfortunately, most biologists didn’t even understand the role of adsorbants in hemoglobin’s function, so practically no one bothered reading his work. The well-accepted fact of “backbone chemical shift” that results from something as simple as calcium binding to a protein is just another way of talking about the principle of association-induction. The actual chemical structure of the cytoplasmic framework in most types of cell had hardly been studied, and Ling concentrated on studies of the physiology of cells, treating the cytoplasm as an ensemble. Now that many cytoplasmic proteins are being studied in detail, the significance of his cell physiology can be seen more easily.

The “membrane” people like to talk about “ion channels” and “channel proteins,” but they are simply describing fragmentary examples of the adsorption-induction process, in which strongly bound substances change the affinity of a protein for small ions and other associated substances. One of the effects of the membrane theory, and of studying enzymes dissolved in water, is that many biochemists got into the habit of thinking of proteins as water-loving materials; otherwise, why would they have to be enclosed by an oily membrane? But, in fact, proteins have a great affinity for fats. Fats are powerful regulatory substances. In excess, the wrong kind of fat associates with the cell framework, and alters that regulatory system, at the same time that it poisons enzymes and other functions. Insoluble proteins tended to be discarded; sometimes they were called “membrane proteins”; when it turned out that the insoluble structural proteins often had “ATPase” functions, this enzyme came to be thought of as the “membrane pump.” Even under ordinary assumptions about the way cells use ATP in their energy economy, Gilbert Ling showed that cells don’t have the energetic capability of maintaining all of their gradients by “pumping” ions and other dissolved substances. But, the common idea that the phosphate bond in ATP is a very “high energy bond,” with 14 kcal of energy, is an unfounded belief; in 1959, for example, Sidney Bernhard showed that a more realistic figure was around 4 kcal. But under relatively water free conditions, the bond forms spontaneously. One of the implications of this fact is that the control of water, the presence or absence of water, and the state of the water, is itself a matter of high-energy interactions. ATP does have a remarkably high energy of adsorption or binding to proteins, and this binding energy allows it to influence the protein’s interactions with water. A very thin layer of water between two objects can bind them together very tightly. The structures and movements in cells exist because of very specific interactions between large molecules, especially proteins, and the water which binds them and separates them. Both the water and the proteins are modified by the presence of carbon dioxide.

Two kinds of experiment show that the standard ideas about ATP and pumps have to be reconsidered. When muscles are stretched, they synthesize ATP (Experientia 1971 Jan 15;27(1):45-6, “Stretch induced formation of ATP-32P in glycerinated fibres of insect flight muscle,” Ulbrich M, Ruegg JC); this strongly suggests that its synthesis is a physical process, occurring in an environment in which water is inactive, allowing the reaction to be close to equilibrium. (In the heart, stretching has an anabolic effect.) In another experimental setup, the temperature is measured near the surface of a nerve; when the nerve is stimulated, the temperature rises momentarily above the starting temperature, but as the nerve recovers and repolarizes, the temperature falls below the ambient temperature. This “refrigeration,” or heat absorption, isn’t compatible with the activation of chemically powered “pumps” to restore the initial arrangement of ions, and it suggests something physically closer to the way that heat is emitted and absorbed by a rubber band when it is stretched and then relaxed. When heat production in a myelinated nerve is measured, the membrane theory would require that the heat production, like the electrical potential, should progress in a saltatory manner, jumping from one node to another, but the measurements showed that the heat production moves continuously along the nerve. This supports the idea that the bulk of the cytoplasm is undergoing a progressive phase transition.

Physically, all of these observations (which make no sense in the membrane theory) are compatible with a view of the cytoplasm as a cooperative molecular ensemble that is poised so that its alternative states are close to equilibrium, allowing it to spontaneously revert to its original state following a stimulus that changes its state slightly, or to cause systematic changes in chemical cycles which produce the substances, such as carbon dioxide and ATP, which tend to restore the original state. Nerve conduction, muscle contraction, and secretion are now recognized to involve the factors that cause “allosteric” shifts in molecular structure, association, and affinities. It is the myth of the cell as a “dilute solution organized by a membrane” that prevents the recognition that cell physiology consists primarily of such processes, coordinated into cooperative phase transitions. The recent discovery that cell filaments form responsive systems extending from the cell’s surface to the chromosomes makes it possible to see the process of genetic expression as an extension of this organized and unified system.

The standard doctrine about the structure of the membrane is that it is a lipid bilayer, meaning that an outer layer of fat (phospholipid) is arranged with its acidic water-soluble end turned outward toward the watery environment, and its fatty water-repellent tail turned inward, against the fatty tail of another layer of molecules, which has its acidic end turned inward, toward the supposedly watery cytoplasm. In support of this arrangement, an “oil loving” stain is applied to hardened cells (otherwise no membrane can be seen under the electron microscope), and a double line appears near the cell’s surface. This is called the “lipid bilayer.” However, since the theory says that the fatty parts of the two layers are pressed against each other, there is in the theory a continuous band of fat, separating two layers made up of the acidic heads of the molecules, and the theoretical structure of the “lipid bilayer” has no resemblance to the double line that is created by the stain. The material generally used to produce the image of a bilayer membrane is osmic acid, an oxidant; it wouldn’t be expected to stain the layers of acidic heads of fat molecules. This might seem to be an embarrassing inconsistency, but apparently not to most scientists. After the electron microscope began making pictures of cells, it took some time to find the stain that would produce any membrane at all, and then it took about thirty years to learn to produce a “membrane” image that had a thickness that seemed appropriate for the theory. Considering the great effort required to produce a “membrane” image of the right size in the right location, they are willing to overlook the fact that the fat-loving stain hasn’t quite found its way to the single band of fat between the acidic layers which their theory describes. Gilbert Ling described the boundary at the cell surface as a phase bouundary, of the sort that exists where two different materials meet, for example at an oil-water interface. When the two substances have different electrical-chemical properties, the forces between the phases move electrons and/or molecules near the surface into what is called an electric double-layer. Since stains have their own electrical and chemical properties, the stain molecules would be affected by the fields that produce an electric double-layer. Osmic acid would be expected to stain certain protein groups, including sulfhydryls and amines, which could be exposed in such an area of strong fields. (Brain tissue that is deprived of oxygen stains diffusely with these “membrane” stains, suggesting that proteins are changing shape sufficiently to expose groups of this sort.) The forces between fat molecules, that allow them to form “hydrophobic bonds,” are actually so weak that they should hardly be called “bonds,” at least at normal temperatures. Fatty surfaces seem to seek each other out in a watery environment because water molecules bind so powerfully to each other that they tend to force out anything that doesn’t bind to them. So, if we even consider the association between fat molecules as a “bond,” it is the weakest bond that exists between any biological molecules. When a cell is attached to a surface, it can be torn to bits in trying to move it, without breaking its attachment to the surface. Obviously, it isn’t attached to the surface by its “lipid bilayer membrane.” The strength of a lipid bilayer would be limited by the extremely weak affinity of fat for fat; if you step on a sticky floor wearing tissue-paper slippers, your foot won’t be ripped from your leg. A lipid bilayer has no more strength than the rainbow that forms on a puddle of water when a microscopic film of oil spreads over its surface. And the rainbow on the puddle is something that really exists.

Even though a cell’s substance can flow, it has a cohesiveness that can greatly exceed that of ordinary watery solutions. The toughness of a steak isn’t affected just by the extracellular connective tissue, as was once believed; the intracellular filamentous materials contribute greatly to its resistance.

Protein filaments can bind cells firmly to the materials that surround them, including other cells. Red blood cells normally float freely in a watery environment, but under some conditions they stack up into a rouleau, roll of coins, formation. The membrane theorists like to explain this pathological association in terms of ionic surface bonds, but experimentalists have pried the cells apart under the microscope, and photographed long extensible, apparently elastic, strands binding them together. The condition appears when the cells’ energy is depleted, suggesting that the strands result from an alteration in the cells’ internal framework. This kind of process would have practical application in the formation of a clot, producing strength and continuity that would be inconceivable if the red cell were “bags of hemoglobin enclosed in a lipid membrane.”

If the cell’s cytoplasm can be mechanically continuous with its environment, then the principle of allosterism, the conditionally responsive change of shape and affinities that is recognized in hemoglobin and some enzymes, has the potential for explaining the cell’s ability to respond to its environment, and to alter that environment in a controlled way. Filamentous, or other space-encompassing structures in effect are carriers and transmitters of fields of various kinds. A cooperative phase change (cooperativity means that a change which is slow to start will proceed quickly to completion once it gets started, because of interactions of its parts) can occur in a structure which has fluidity, so the signal transmitting function needn’t be tied to mechanically fixed filaments. An ensemble of molecules can behave in a coherent manner resembling the behavior of hemoglobin. In fact, hemoglobin is a molecular ensemble which behaves cooperatively, as a functional unit, so there is nothing essentially novel in thinking about larger molecular ensembles making up the cytoplasm.

Ions such as calcium are bound to oppositely charged ions, counter-ions, which are abundant on proteins. As the cell’s state changes, calcium (and other) ions can be liberated from the binding proteins, and the momentarily high concentration of ions can serve to transmit an excited and activated state to other molecules, promoting enzyme activity, muscle contraction, nervous transmission, or other cell function. Not long ago, these movements of ions within the cell were explained in terms of membrane pumps and organelle membranes. Now, calcium-binding proteins and “channel proteins” have been identified; the term “channel” derives from the idea that the impermeable membrane had to have pores for the entry and exit of ions and other substances. Supposedly “leakage” through those pores required pumps to compensate by moving substances in the opposite direction. At present, publications on ion channels are more than ten times as frequent as publications on their associated “membrane pumps.” Many years ago, it was discovered that large numbers of sulfhydryl groups (a hydrogen bonded to a sulfur atom, which is often in the cysteine group of a protein) appeared during cell division. This represents a rapid and massive change in cell chemistry. The sulfhydryl group is ionizable, but in the late sixties and early seventies when the sulfhydryl shift still seemed important to biologists, there was no support for the idea that these groups could be involved in ion regulation, as part of Gilbert Ling’s association-induction model of the cell. However, recently it has been found that a “calcium channel protein” contains a cysteine group that ionizes during the molecule’s change of state. (Am J Physiol 1997 Jul;273(1 Pt 1):C230-8, “Possible thiol group involvement in intracellular pH effect on low-conductance Ca(2+)-dependent K+ channels,”Riquelme G, Diaz M, Sepulveda FV.)

Gradually, the idea of allosteric regulatory molecules that are altered by the reversible binding of regulatory substances has gained common acceptance, but the tendency is still to look for these signal receptors at the cell membrane and in association with the control of gene expression. But the cell filaments that make up the cytoskeleton are now known to form continuous systems from the cell surface, through the nuclear membrane, and into the vicinity of the chromosomes. These various filaments have “membrane-like” properties, allowing them to act at, and across, phase boundaries, but also making them sensitive to subtle changes in their environment, such as temperature, ionic balance, and the presence of fatty materials and materials combining various degrees of polarity in their structure; for example, the extremely toxic bacterial endotoxins are lipopolysaccharides, that derive their unique toxicity from the combination of fat and sugar in the same molecule.

For many years, the enzymes of glycolysis were the paradigm for the idea of random interactions between enzymes and their substrates, the materials they catalyze. They were thought to be the most random elements in a randomly organized system. Although it has been over ten years since Sidney Bernhard showed that these enzymes don’t wait for their substrates to randomly diffuse into their active sites, this important fact is still generally ignored. (Others, from 1940 to 1998, have reported evidence that the enzymes of glycolysis are “bound to the cell framework.”) The ordered behavior Bernhard demonstrated for these “most random” enzymes should be taken as a clue to the nature of other components of the cell.

Rather than having to transmit randomly received signals through random movements into the nucleus, the model of the cell that is implied by the work of Sidney Fox and Gilbert Ling is one in which “receptors” and “effectors” are distibuted throughout the cell substance. Rather than “feedback” of signals along channels of communication to processing centers, the processes of perception and response are distributed throughout a cooperative system, with the possiblity of response governing the process of judgment. There is intelligence in the system at every level, there is no coercion of stupid slave molecules. Fields, forms, associations, and movements all interact in a sensitive and responsive unity. At least they do in health.

In the process of an organism’s development, the cell’s form precedes its mature chemical functioning. The form depends on the internal framework, and that depends on the cell’s contact with a specific kind of extracellular material. The matrix governs the basic pattern of gene expression, acting through the structural elements. In aging and stress, the matrix tends to deteriorate progressively. The matrix, being outside the cell, isn’t constantly being renewed as the cell itself is, but it can be enzymically repaired, if the enzymes are not inhibited. Being located between the bloodstream and the metabolizing cells, it is necessarily exposed to all circulating environmental toxins.

There is a functional continuity between the extracellular matrix and the expression of genes. (Weaver and Bissell, 1996; Pienta, et al., 1992.) This has been recognized for several decades by many researchers, but the doctrine of the cell membrane enclosing a watery solution has obstructed progress in this direction.

 

SOME IMPLICATIONS

There is a chemical continuum from volcanic conditions to nerve cell structures and functions. The chemical precursors of life, ammonia, acetic acid, pyruvic acid, and amino acids are formed under volcanic conditions of high temperature and pressure. (Gunter Wachtershauser, H. J. Morowitz, R. M. Hazen, and J. A. Brandes.) Under slightly milder conditions, amino acids spontaneously form proteins and self-replicating bacteria-like structures. (Sidney Fox, in the 1960s; in the July 31, 1998 issue of Science, Wachtershauser reported the synthesis of peptides, in a weirdly feeble parody of the work Fox did more than 30 years earlier.) Fox’s spontaneously formed proteins improve nerve cell function–memory (in mice), and in vitro growth, survival (increased 250%) and function, suggesting their functional similarity to ancient natural cellular proteins. Natural proteins become modified during development and stress, and these new primitive proteins might be interpreted by the cell as embryonic proteins, temporarily refreshing some cellular processes. The spontaneously formed protein structures are stable in warm water, and dissolve in cold water; microtubules and other fundamental cell components also “dissolve” when cooled. Formed in a hot environment, the synthetic proteins are biologically very compatible materials.

In this perspective, there is no point in which one has to insert an “assumption of randomness” into the process of cell formation or functioning. The old idea of randomly arranged material, being ordered by the accumulation of random changes, was an idea that derived from the old concept of a watchmaker god inserting order into formless matter. In this more realistic perspective, the significant issue is what happens when disorder is introduced into the ordered cellular system. The introduction of disorder is a stimulus, a challenge to respond and to adapt. Excitation and assimilation, or excitotoxicity and degeneration, are two kinds of response to the introduction of disorder. Although the creation of order is a spontaneous tendency of the molecules, the introduction of disorder causes energetic changes that lead to the creation of a new order. The achievement of a new order builds on the old, emerges from the old, but contains the old order implicitly. The implicit presence of old structures accounts for the phenomena of memory, imprinting, transgenerational influences, and the recapitulation of phylogeny in development.

In the Randle effect (it’s called the “Randle cycle,” but there is no cycle), increasing the amount of fat in the bloodstream decreases the ability of cells to metabolize glucose; glucose tolerance decreases, as in diabetes, except that the response to fat is instantaneous. Respiration decreases, mitochondria retain calcium, which tends to accumulate until it destroys the mitochondria. The calcium, when it is released from the mitochondria, causes excitation to increase. Stimulation without efficient energy production leads to proteolysis and apoptosis or other forms of cell death. Sugars replace carbon dioxide and acetate on lysines. This process is involved in diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, arthritis, and other degenerative diseases, probably including osteoporosis. Mitochondrial damage tends to increase the production of lactic acid instead of carbon dioxide, and lactic acid can stimulate the inappropriate overgrowth of blood vessels, as occurs in the eyes in diabetes. During stress and aging, free fatty acids appear in the bloodstream in large quantities.

Besides their chemical effects, which lead indirectly to chronic disruption of signalling systems, the unsaturated fats have direct and immediate effects on regulatory processes, water uptake, intercellular communication, and excitation. Cell proteins have an affinity for fats, and their hydrophobic surfaces tend to adsorb them. Unsaturated fats have a greater affinity for water than saturated fats do, and the location of the unsaturated bonds along the fat’s carbon chain will affect the ways proteins interact with water. The fact that animal cells synthesize only fatty acids with a chain of eight fully saturated carbon atoms in their tails undoubtedly has something to do with the toxic effects of other unsaturated fats on the respiratory apparatus.

The unsaturated fats that are so systematically disruptive to warm-blooded animals are characteristically produced in plants at relatively low temperatures. In organisms that live at low temperatures, they probably serve a function (among others) that is analogous to the function of estrogen in warm animals, namely, raising the “structural temperature” of water, modifying chemical activity by liberating water to some extent from the domination of the cellular proteins.

One of the old theories of aging was that something (they called it metaplasm) accumulated in cells as a result of metabolism, the way ashes accumulate in a stove. Lipofuscin, or age-pigment, is related to the oxidation of unsaturated fats, and has been proposed to be such a material, that progressively limits a cell’s adaptive capacity because of its physical and chemical properties. Amyloid, a clear mass of protein deposited in and around cells, is another such age or stress-related material, that is currently being studied in Alzheimer’s disease and other degenerative diseases. Glycation, the attachment of sugars to groups that otherwise could be occupied by carbon dioxide, seems to be a crucial factor in the formation of amyloid. (The term “amyloid,” in fact means “starch-like.”) Changes in the extracellular matrix, for example the cross-linking of collagen molecules, have been thought to cause some of the characteristic changes of aging, and again, glycation is the major mechanism in the formation of cross-links.

In Alzheimer’s disease, the commonly recognized features are tangles, amyloid deposits, hypometabolism, and evidence of inflammatory processes. Cells related to inflammation can produce amyloid, as well as remove it. Glycation, the attachment of sugar molecules to proteins, can happen quickly, and can occur either with or without enzyme catalysis. The failure of glucose consumption and of carbon dioxide production in Alzheimer’s disease predisposes to glycation.

Glycation imitates mutated forms of proteins, for example normal transthyretin behaves like the prion protein, forming amyloid. Transthyretin, the protein that carries thyroid hormone and vitamin A, is normally taken up along with cholesterol under the influence of thyroid hormone. Abnormal cholesterol metabolism is one of the traits associated with Alzheimer’s disease. In the absence of thyroid-supported respiration, carbon dioxide and other respiration-associated molecules (e.g., acetate) are replaced by lactate and unused sugar, causing abnormal modifications of proteins such as tau, which regulates microtubule assembly. Glycation of collagen in the extracellular matrix alters the properties of the matrix. The glycated matrix would become a preferred site for glycated prion-like proteins.

It is possible that the altered transthyretin makes vitamin A less available to cells. Vitamin A deficiency creates major disruption of the framework proteins. Fragments of starch molecules inhibit the enzymes that remove inappropriately bound sugar molecules from proteins, and the inability to metabolize sugar into carbon dioxide increases that binding. Starches and unsaturated fats cooperate in this process of inappropriate sugar binding, while thyroid hormone, and the carbon dioxide it produces, tend to prevent the binding.

Considering the universal importance of carbon dioxide to life, the ways it interacts with all of the important substances that make up organisms, that it is involved closely with ATP synthesis and other “energy-related” processes, that it participates intimately in the regulation of water and ions, that it is therapeutic in a range of conditions including angina pectoris, hypoxia, epilepsy, inflammation, shock, lipid peroxidation, pneumonia, and asthma, I think we can at least conclude that it is a largely overlooked mediator between chemical energy and life processes. In many cases, its movements and reactions constitute the actual motive force that so many fantasy theories have failed to explain. In other situations, it fills out the context for understanding the energy-mediating actions of ATP, calcium, and hormones.

In the special arrangement of matter that is the living state, in which the most common events involve processes that are so close to equilibrium that some of them can be thought of as oscillations in an elastic system, carbon dioxide participates in both enzymic and nonenzymic reactions that produce, conserve, transfer, and transform energy. In its quickly reversible binding to protein amino groups, for example, it alters the protein’s electrical charge, its folding, and its manner of associating with water and other substances. Its availablility to occupy these groups protects them from attack by substances that would degrade the organism’s energy and structure. If the protein, water, ionic system is thought of as energized matter, like a wound-up watch spring, it is the formation of carbon dioxide which has energized it and stabilized it.


REFERENCES

 

Ukr Biokhim Zh 1995 May-Jun;67(3):84-92, [Role of low molecular weight metabolites as natural regulators of metabolism]. Mel’nychuk DO, Mykhailovs’kyi VO.

The paper presents results of scientific activity of the Department of Metabolism Regulation. The main sections are: carbamates formation and their role in metabolism regulation; metabolic system of acid-base homeostasis in animals; polyamines metabolism in the extremal states; mechanisms of metabolic adaptation in mammals. Experimental data are presented which evidence for the fact that tissue proteins in vivo are subjected to nonenzymic carboxylation with formation of carbominic groups. In this case a charge variation in definite sites of protein molecule is observed, which specifies variation of the protein conformation and biological properties. Basic regularities of protein carbamate formation reactions are revealed with factors affecting their intensity. It is shown that the presence of carbonic acid in the medium increases the rate of reactions catalyzed with lactate dehydrogenase from the rabbit liver, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from yeast and trypsin. Under the same conditions the reaction velocity rate catalyzed with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from the rabbit liver and with ATP-citrate (pro-35)-liase is considerably decreased. Changes in the concentration of carbonic acid within the physiological limits are found to have no effect on lactate dehydrogenase from the cattle heart and chymotrypsin. The rate of the reaction catalyzed by NAD-dependent malate denydrogenase was studied as affected by carbon dioxide. It is shown that acceleration of the catalysis in these systems depends on the presence of both a bicarbonate anion and soluble carbon dioxide. IR spectra of NAD-dependent malate dehydrogenase in the deuterium oxide solutions were studied in the CO2-free solutions and solutions saturated with it.

 

Formation of peptides from amino acids by single or multiple additions of ATP to suspensions of nucleoproteinoid microparticles. Nakashima T; Fox SW, Biossystems, 1981, 14:2, 151-61.

“When lysine-rich proteinoid, which catalyzes the formation of peptides from amino acids and ATP, is complexed with acidic proteinoid to form microspheres of mixed constitution, the normal synthesis by basic proteinoid alone is multiplied several-fold. The product consists not only of small peptides but also of a high-molecular-weight fraction of substituted proteinoid. Suspensions of particles of lysine-rich proteinoid complexed with polyadenylic acid catalyze the synthesis of peptides from each of the amino acids tested with ATP.”

 

Compartmentalization in proteinoid microspheres. Brooke S; Fox SW. Biosystems, 1977 Jun, 9:1, 1-22.

 

Interactions between diverse proteinoids and microspheres in simulation of primordial evolution. Hsu LL; Fox SW. Biosystems, 1976 Jul, 8:2, 89-101.

Experiments demonstrating an incorporation of different enzymelike activities into a single preparation of proteinoid microspheres provide a conceptual basis for the primitive lengthening of protometabolic pathways. An enhancement of one enzymelike activity by another proteinoid in the same microsphere has been found. This effect, plus the pathway-lengthening propensity of combinations of microspheres, indicates selective advantages contributing to adaptive protoselection. Data reported in this paper also bring into purview the concept of internally controlled variation. Inferences are derived for the origin of protosexuality in protocells. When allowance is made for a closer relationship to the environment than that needed in contemporary selection, the fundamental mechanistic requirements of protoevolution are regarded as met by the proteinoid microsphere.

 

Q Rev Biol 1991 Jun;66(2):181-5. Synthesis of life in the lab? Defining a protoliving system. Fox, S.W. Department of Plant Biology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale 62901-6509.

“The synthesis of a living system in the lab has been judged by a number of critics as partly attained by the proteinoid microsphere because of its primitive properties of metabolism, growth, and reproduction. These same critics, however, judge the organism as not alive, or as being 50 to 75 percent alive (Baltscheffsky and Jurka, 1984), owing to the absence of a nucleic acid genetic coding mechanism. The experiments in retracing evolution suggest, however, that the self-sequencing of amino acids was the evolutionary precursor of modern nucleic acid templating; the genetic memory is the molecule. The proteinoid microsphere is not a modern living system, but does represent at least a protoliving system (Fox and Dose, 1972). Berra (1990, p. 75) has commented on other difficulties in defining a protoliving system. In Berra’s opinion, metabolism, reproduction, responsiveness to stimuli, and cellularity constitute or describe aliveness. These properties characterize proteinoid microspheres.”

 

Brain Res 1991 Feb 15;541(2):273-83. Promotion of neuronal survival in vitro by thermal proteins and poly(dicarboxylic)amino acids. Hefti F, Junard EO, Knusel B, Strauss WL, Strang PF, Przybylski A, Vaughan G, Fox SW. Andrus Gerontology Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles 90089.

Evaluating molecules for their ability to promote survival and growth of neurons, we tested thermal proteins on cultures of dissociated fetal rat forebrain neurons. (Thermal proteins are polyamino acids formed when mixtures of amino acids with minimal proportions of glutamic or aspartic acid are heated.) Thermal proteins, added to low-density cultures in serum-free medium, stimulated neurite outgrowth and induced the formation of neuronal networks which survived for 6-10 days. Neurons in control cultures failed to grow and degenerated completely within 2-4 days. Effective concentrations (EC50) of thermal proteins ranged from 3 to 100 micrograms/ml. They were equally effective when present in the medium during the culture time or after precoating of the culture dishes. A single preparation which contained only aspartic and glutamic acid was effective, and similar survival promoting actions were then found for polyglutamic acid and mixed polyamino acids containing glutamic or aspartic acid. Thermal proteins and polyglutamic acid acted in a specific manner since, under the same experimental conditions, many control peptides, proteins and growth hormones failed to promote survival of neurons. Furthermore, their effects were antagonized by heparin, but not heparan sulfate nor chondroitin sulfate. These findings suggest that sequences of successive dicarboxylic amino acid residues are able to promote survival and neurite elongation of cultured neurons and that such sequences are responsible for the survival promoting action of thermal proteins. They invite the speculation that sequences of successive dicarboxylic amino acids, while occur in many proteins and show a high degree of evolutionary conservation, may have functional role in molecular recognition processes during neuronal development.

 

Proteinoid microspheres more stable in hot than in cold water. Syren RM; Sanjur A; Fox SW Biosystems, 1985, 17:4, 275-80.

“Experimental examination of the question of whether some proteinoid microspheres might be stable in hot water has revealed proteinoids that are soluble in cold water but precipitate on heating.”

 

From proteinoid microsphere to contemporary cell: formation of internucleotide and peptide bonds by proteinoid particles. Fox SW; Jungck JR; Nakashima T. Orig Life, 1974 Jan-Apr, 5:1, 227-37.

 

A model for the origin of stable protocells in a primitive alkaline ocean. Snyder WD; Foxm S.W. Biosystems, 1975 Oct, 7:2, 222-9.

“When a mixture of the eighteen proteinous amino acids are suitably heated in the dry state with seawater salts, a copolyamino acid results.” “When one fraction of the seawater proteinoid is dissolved in hot water, and the solution is cooled, proteinoid microspheres result.” “These processes thus constitute a simple model for the origin of a protocell stable in a primitive alkaline ocean.”

 

Membrane, action, and oscillatory potentials in simulated protocells. Przybylski AT; Stratten WP; Syren RM; Fox, S.W. Naturwissenschaften, 1982 Dec, 69:12, 561-3.

“Electrical membrane potentials, oscillations, and action potentials are observed in proteinoid microspheres impaled with (3 M KC1) microelectrodes. Although effects are of greater magnitude when the vesicles contain glycerol and natural or synthetic lecithin, the results in the purely synthetic thermal protein structures are substantial, attaining 20 mV amplitude in some cases. The results add the property of electrical potential to the other known properties of proteinoid microspheres, in their role as models for protocells.”

 

Synthesis of peptides from amino acids and ATP with lysine-rich proteinoid. Nakashima T; Fox, S.W. J Mol Evol, 1980 May, 15:2, 161-8.

“Lysine-rich proteinoids in aqueous solution catalyze the formation of peptides from free amino acids and ATP.”

 

Self-sequencing of amino acids and origins of polyfunctional protocells. Fox, S.W. Orig Life, 1984, 14:1-4, 485-8.

The primal role of the origins of proteins in molecular evolution is discussed. On the basis of this premise, the significance of the experimentally established self-sequencing of amino acids under simulated geological conditions is explained as due to the fact that the products are highly nonrandom and accordingly contain many kinds of information. When such thermal proteins are aggregated into laboratory protocells, an action that occurs readily, the resultant protocells also contain many kinds of information. Residue-by-residue order, enzymic activities, and lipid quality accordingly occur within each preparation of proteinoid (thermal protein). In this paper are reviewed briefly the phenomenon of self-sequencing of amino acids, its relationship to evolutionary processes, other significance of such self-ordering, and the experimental evidence for original polyfunctional protocells.

 

The evolutionary significance of phase-separated microsystems. Fox SW Orig Life, 1976 Jan, 7:1, 49-68.

The source, preparation, and properties of phase-separated systems such as lipid layers, coacervate droplets, sulphobes, and proteinoid microspheres are reviewed. These microsystems are of interest as partial models for the cell and as partial or total models for the protocell. Conceptual benefits from study of such models are: clues to experiments on origins, insights into principles of action and, in some instances, presumable models of the origin of the protocell. The benefits to evolution of organized chemical units are many, and can in part be analyzed. Ease of formation suggests that such units would have arisen early in primondiae organic evolution. Integration of these various concepts and the results of consequent experiments have contributed to the developing theory of the origins of primordial and of contemporary life.

 

“Activation of glycine by ATP, a divalent cation, and proteinoid microspheres,” Ryan JW; Fox SW Curr Mod Biol, 1973 Dec, 5:3, 115-8.

 

“Synthesis of oligonucleotides by proteinoid microspheres acting on ATP,” Jungck JR; Fox, S.W. Naturwissenschaften, 1973 Sep, 60:9, 425-7.

 

“Conjugation of proteinoid microspheres: a model of primordial communication,” Hsu, L.L.; Brooke, S.; Fox, S.W. Curr Mod Biol, 1971 May, 4:1, 12-25.

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