Rejuvant?
Has anyone heard of this?
The speaker presented a talk indicating that users got substantial drop in DNA methylation age results - I seem to recall an average of 8 years after 6 months usage
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This is strange and was in the FAQ on their website:
Can I take Rejuvant with multivitamins?
Based on our data, taking multivitamins or other supplements that have many ingredients might not have additive effects. Because of this, we recommend taking Rejuvant apart from other supplements and vitamins.
Do I really need to stop taking multivitamins?
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Lifespan IO talked about it yesterday. I'll wait for better studies.
https://www.lifespan.io/news/pilot-study-results-suggest-epigenetic-age-reversal/
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Questionable 13-Site DNAm Clock?
On fightingaging.org, Reason says the following:
"The important point to consider here is that the TrueMe Labs assay is not a relabeling of any of the more established epigenetic clocks, those with significant research associated with their behavior. It is is its own beast, an independently developed test. It uses only 13 DNA methylation sites, and so it is very possible that it is much more sensitive to some interventions than others, in comparison to, say, the original Horvath clock, depending on which mechanisms influence those sites. Thus one cannot take any of the established research into the better studied clocks and use it to inform expectations as to how the TrueMe Labs assay will behave. 8.5 years might sound like a large effect size, but it is impossible to say whether or not that is the case."
In other words, the Rejuvenant claim about producing a DNAm clock reset is very questionable, because they used a nonstandard clock, possibly tailored to show a maximum effect. It would be a real service to the anti-aging enterprise if someone or some group would demonstrate, either systematically with mice or anecdotally with humans, that Calcium Alpha-ketoglutarate intervention actually significantly lowers the methylation age indicated by the Horvath clock.
Also, I note that there is a load of misinformation about DNA methylation on the Rejuvenant site. It characterizes DNA methylation as age-accumulated "rust" that randomly builds up with age. As I understand it, the correct picture is that genes are silenced by methylation, mainly by methylating sites in the promoter regions of DNA coding for making mRNA leading to protein production. Even infants have many methylated regions silencing genes that are not needed. As aging progresses, epigenetic programming silences some genes and activates others, and the methylation pattern shifts. Horvath's clock specifically selects hundreds of methylation sites that are best (positively or negatively) correlated with aging from 450,000 sites on an analysis chip. I'm not impressed by the results of a 13-site analysis.
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JGC said:
the Rejuvenant claim about producing a DNAm clock reset is very questionable, because they used a nonstandard clock, possibly tailored to show a maximum effect. It would be a real service to the anti-aging enterprise if someone or some group would demonstrate, either systematically with mice or anecdotally with humans, that Calcium Alpha-ketoglutarate intervention actually significantly lowers the methylation age indicated by the Horvath clock.Yes: I pointed this out earlier in this topic. I doubt they intentionally "hacked" it to turn out favorably for their product: the problem is that it's sloppy and not validated, not that it's intentionally pushed in one direction or the other.
Also, I note that there is a load of misinformation about DNA methylation on the Rejuvenant site. It characterizes DNA methylation as age-accumulated "rust" that randomly builds up with age. As I understand it, the correct picture is that genes are silenced by methylation, mainly by methylating sites in the promoter regions of DNA coding for making mRNA leading to protein production. Even infants have many methylated regions silencing genes that are not needed. As aging progresses, epigenetic programming silences some genes and activates others, and the methylation pattern shifts. Horvath's clock specifically selects hundreds of methylation sites that are best (positively or negatively) correlated with aging from 450,000 sites on an analysis chip. I'm not impressed by the results of a 13-site analysis.
So they're actually kind of right about this, though they've oversimplified. When you're developing from a zygote to a newborn and go through development to become an adult, your cells undergo regulated methylation under a developmental program aimed to turn you eventually into a functioning adult with all your cells doing what they're supposed to do. What happens in aging is very different: not an unfolding preprogrammed process, but a series of events all somehow involving damage that changes the epigenome in dysfunctional ways. This is a mixture of a very small number of stochastic events that methylate or demethylate genes that should stay as they are (direct epigenetic "rust") and regulated changes in cells as they have to adapt to an environment that has been changed by stochastic aging damage (what we might call secondary or downstream epigenetic "rust response").
Also, everyone keeps talking about "the Horvath clock." It's important to understand that there are now dozens of epigenetic aging clocks, including at least six developed by or with the involvement of Horvath, each of which is more or lesss good at different things. His original clocks were good at predicting calendar age, but not very good at predicting risk of age-related disease and death (biological age); the newer Levine "DNAm PhenoAge" is better at that (and the underlying PhenoAge clock is even better), and the "DNAm GrimAge" is at least as good and maybe better, though it "cheats" a bit by building smoking status into the clock.
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New rejuvant user here. I think it's amazing (as far as my exercise performance goes :P ). I'm combining it with 6mg weekly rapamycin, 500mg x 2 metformin, 5mg rosuvastatin, 500mg x 2 vit c, daily celery juice, garlic powder/AGE, magnesium, fiber, vit D... No issues to report after 4-5 days of use... except having a lot of energy to exercise :) We'll see how my bloodwork will be affected over time.
Life extension studies are solid (mice, worms, flies). Mice life extension is there (maybe ~3-4% on avg). Health extension is very significant. Turns hair darker ("better fur" :))... also reported by a forum member. Reduces ischemia in humans. There's some evidence AKG is an anti-cancer compound (works agains several cancer lines in cell and mice studies); reduces hypoxia. Human studies are limited, but that's ok as this compound has been on the market for decades and it hasn't harmed anyone. Safe to test N=1, imho.