Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - Aging is Now Optional w/ David Sinclair | EP #60

Episode Date: August 25, 2023

In this episode, filmed during Abundance360, Peter and David discuss David’s groundbreaking research on reversing aging through epigenetic changes, emphasizing that aging is not just damage to the b...ody but a loss of information. They talk about age reversal as a possibility,rejuvenating brains and regaining lost memories.  03:06 | Reversing Human Aging: Possible? 22:28 | Rejuvenating Brains With Science 38:48 |Reversing Aging Through Diet David Sinclair is a biologist and academic known for his expertise in aging and epigenetics. Sinclair is a genetics professor and the Co-Director of Harvard Medical School’s Paul F. Glenn Center for Biology of Aging Research. He’s been included in Time100 as one of the 100 Most Influential People in the World, and his research has been featured all over the media. Besides writing a New York Times Best Seller, David has co-founded several biotech companies, a science publication called Aging, and is an inventor of 35 patents Read Sinclair’s latest study,Chemically Induced Reprogramming to Reverse Cellular Aging _____________ Get Peter's new Longevity Practices book for free: https://www.diamandis.com/longevity  Seed’s DS-01® Daily Synbiotic – a 2-in-1 probiotic and prebiotic that supports digestive health, gut immunity, skin health, heart health, and more. Try Seed’s DS-01® Daily Synbiotic, and make sure to use the code MOONSHOTS at checkout to get a 25% discount. _____________ I send weekly emails with the latest insights and trends on today’s and tomorrow’s exponential technologies. Stay ahead of the curve, and sign up now: Tech Blog _____________ Connect With Peter: Twitter Instagram Youtube Moonshots and Mindsets Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:37 8th under the big top at Toronto Lakeshore Boulevard West. Tickets at cirquetusoleil.com. Echo. Thanks for presenting partners Sun Life. Do you think there is an upper limit to human aging? It's not even a question. Let me explain. I thought that that wasn't fair to have consciousness and to know that we're going to be sick and die and watch everyone else die. I was inspired by my grandmother who told me that humans can do better. My PhD supervisor said, why would you go study aging? It's not even a real science. And thank goodness I didn't listen
Starting point is 00:01:12 to him. Aging isn't just damage to the body like we wear out. It's actually a loss of information. There will be a day, I believe, where you'll be able to rejuvenate your brain and get back memories, get your ability to learn again. I'm no longer talking about slowing aging. I'm talking about true age reversal. Multiple times there's a backup copy of information in every cell. And that fact that there is a backup copy changes everything. There is no law that says we must age. Remember that.
Starting point is 00:01:44 Welcome to Moonshots and Mindsets. One of my favorite conversations from Abundance360 this year was a fireside chat with Dr. David Sinclair. Known around the world as one of the leading, if not the leading thinker on age reversal and epigenetics, David is a professor at Harvard Medical School who studies aging and longevity. He had just published an epic paper in Cell about the work he's done over 13 years on how to accelerate aging from epigenetic changes and then reverse that aging. In this segment, we're going to be diving into the work that he's most recently done
Starting point is 00:02:22 and where he thinks it's going. You know, I'm a fan of David, a big fan. I've donated to his lab. I've written about his work in the book that I wrote with Tony Robbins called Life Force. I promoted his book, Lifespan, David Sinclair's book, probably more than I've promoted my books. He's one of the most exhilarating thinkers, a dear and beautiful soul. We're going to be visiting David during my Longevity Platinum trip this coming August
Starting point is 00:02:52 and going to his lab. And I'll probably have a follow-on podcast when we dive into some of the deep science that he's doing. He's an individual that, during this conversation, will answer the question, is there an upper age to how long we live? What is the latest on the epigenetic reprogramming that has been able to reverse the aging of tissues? And he's someone with whom I'm working on a HealthSpan XPRIZE. Super excited about this.
Starting point is 00:03:22 All right, so settle in, get ready. What would you do with an extra 20 or 30 years of healthy lifespan? You're about to find out. Enjoy this episode from my private summit, Abundance360, with Dr. David Sinclair. Welcome, David. Thanks, Peter. Thanks for having me back. Hi, everyone. Thank you to you and serena for flying in from india it was a long flight how long was that i don't know too long uh well uh the topic of longevity has grown to one of epic proportions um and i think i want to hit on a point i made earlier and I think I want to hit on a point I made earlier the idea of human health span extension of age reversal was kind of a taboo subject a while ago wasn't it well not too long ago yeah when I started in this field in the early 90s it was considered the end of my career by many people
Starting point is 00:04:20 so my PhD supervisor said why would you go study aging? It's too complicated to understand. It's not even a real science. And thank goodness I didn't listen to him. Yeah. So remember that for our students out there watching. Was it what that got you to move into that direction? Was it a personal passion? Was it an inkling? It was definitely more than an inkling and still is. If any of you have read my book, you'll know that it was... By the way, how many folks have here have read Lifespan? Yes? Thank you. I appreciate that. And Peter, I think you know the answer to the question. That's why you asked it.
Starting point is 00:05:03 I was inspired by my grandmother who told me that humans can do better and that's what I love about what Peter does here. That's the vision, it's that we can always do better, there's a bright horizon that we need to get to, we need to steer humanity in that direction. I felt that way my whole life that's why we're friends among other reasons and so she said when I was four years old that everybody I knew and including my pets We're gonna die and it's not going to be pretty and then I'm gonna die and as a four-year-old that was a bit of a shock to be told that and
Starting point is 00:05:35 We all we all learn this around the same age But we forget about it because it's too painful to live every day knowing that fact. As sentient beings, as conscious animals, it's really a burden that we bear. And I thought that that wasn't fair, to have consciousness and to know that we're going to be sick and die and watch everyone else die. That was at age four, and then at age around 15, 16, I thought this new technology called genetic engineering
Starting point is 00:06:01 could actually tackle this problem in a way that had never been done before. So I set my sights on that. Let's go to January 12th you published a paper in Cell, you published a few landmark papers this one being amongst them that showed the ability to control aging using epigenetics in mammals. Just, you know, what were the major points of that paper because it definitely it cemented your your work and this this concept of the information theory of aging. Yeah, so the information theory of aging as it's called, I formulated when I was
Starting point is 00:06:42 still in my 20s. I woke up in the middle of the night With this idea that I guess it was delivered to me by muses Wrote it down in my notebook and I still have that notebook in my office and I've been going off that playbook ever since and That's the idea that aging isn't just damage to the body like we wear out It's actually a loss of information that we inherited from our parents and built on during development and ye cells have that problem and we just finally published when was that 25 years later that we mammals have the same issue and by understanding I think a large part of why we age we were able to control the
Starting point is 00:07:23 aging process in a colony of mice, driving them forwards and backwards in their age and making them get diseases. And now we're even reversing those. DAVID BATTS- That's spectacular. So one of the questions we asked everybody when they walked in here was to put on their badge, how old do you think you will live and uh you know i think the 90 percent had hit 120 or higher but i think what's happened is society has trained us to have certain expectations right you
Starting point is 00:07:55 know if your parents your grandparents had made it to 75 or 80 you expect that and when you hear the oldest living human being is 122 123 you think okay think, okay, there's a brick wall there. One of the questions I'd love you to share, one of the answers I'd love you to share is, do you think there is an upper limit to human aging? Well, I know there isn't. You know there is not. Yeah. It's not even a question. Drop the mic moment. Let me explain There are lots of reasons why I give that answer to me it's self-evident but for some people it isn't and there are critics of this idea that we can live beyond 120 but one of the best examples is that we've been able to extend the lifespan of every
Starting point is 00:08:47 species that we've tried to extend the lifespan of, and we're no different from those species. That's point one. The second is that there are many species who are very similar to us genetically, biologically, that live a lot longer than we do. The best example would be the bowhead whale, but a lot of whales live longer than us. And they have children. They conscious they produce milk so we just need to mimic what they have that allows them to live so long and i think we have a much better idea now of how to do that and so yeah that there is no law that says we must age remember that so one of the things that's going on we've
Starting point is 00:09:23 spent the last few days talking about massive advances in A.I. and quantum computing and sensors, networks, big data. And the realization is we're in a period of very hyper growth of these technologies. And it was Ray Kurzweil who will be speaking tomorrow morning, talks about the bridge to a bridge that your job is not to live now to do something that's going to get you an extra 100 years. It's to get you the next 10 healthy years to intercept those technologies. Do you agree with the idea, David? I think you do, but maybe your time frame is different that this next decade is very different than any time ever. Oh, for sure. So we're already many decades ahead of where I thought we would be technologically from when I started I thought I was working to help my children and future children and and
Starting point is 00:10:15 grandchildren, but it turns out that the pace of discovery has gone way faster and that's partly due to Technology we can now do an experiment that analyzes billions of genes in the same time frame in a day that used to take us years of work and billions of dollars and that allows us to do very quick experiments the other thing that makes me super positive about this is that we've made a I think super positive about this is that we've made a I think we've made a major breakthrough in our understanding of not just why we age but also how to control that process and the the turning point
Starting point is 00:10:54 in my career was the discovery that there's a backup copy of information in every cell in every everybody's cells and that that backup copy can be accessed and there's a switch that you can flip That allows cells to reset their biological age and function again as though they were young because literally they are young again And that fact that there is a backup copy changes everything We're no, i'm no longer talking about slowing slowing aging I'm talking about true age reversal multiple times and I don't get left offstage anymore when I say that Do you want to give it up for that? I mean the idea that we we aren't
Starting point is 00:11:44 Tied to the tyranny of aging and death is extraordinary. It changes everything. Hey everybody, Peter Diamandis here. I've been asked over and over again, what do I do for my own health? Well, I put it down in this book called Peter's Longevity Practices. It's very readable in just an hour. In the book, I cover longevity diet, exercise, sleep, my annual found upload, meds and supplements, longevity mindset. It's literally consumable in just an hour's time. Hopefully to incentivize you to make a difference in your life, to intercept the technologies coming our way. If you want this, it's free. Just check out the link below and download it right now.
Starting point is 00:12:24 The evidence that you have for this backup copy, there are a few things you speak about in your book and your podcast. Could you speak just a few examples there? Right. Let's see. We've got some visuals we could call up, actually. So let's call up the slide with the four faces on it, the top right on our guide here. the four faces on it, the top right on our guide here. Slide six, I think it is. Yep, that's a good one. All right, so let's do a show of hands. So how many of you have heard of the epigenome
Starting point is 00:12:55 or at least epigenetics? Hopefully everybody's raising your hand. Okay, all right, we're done. They're all good students. All right, so the concept is that what we've realized is that most of disease and disability is not driven by our genes. It's actually controlled by the regulator of those genes, which is the epigenome.
Starting point is 00:13:17 One of the best examples of that are these people here. So these are individuals from two sets of twins. These are in Denmark, a very large study of Danish twins, looking at the effects of genes versus environment or epigenetics, which is what responds to the environment. And so if we click the button forward once, you'll see that the identical twin of these two individuals, hopefully you can see, looks a lot younger and is actually younger biologically. We can now measure that.
Starting point is 00:13:47 And it turns out that by living a healthy lifestyle, often you hear about doctors recommending these things. We know a lot about how to slow down the aging process. You don't just look younger, you actually are biologically younger. And that's why if you exercise, you eat right, you eat less often, you take the right supplements, you will be biologically younger and you will actually stave off disease until much later. So what does that actually mean? If if we go back one slide, the concept is information. So the main type of
Starting point is 00:14:18 information that we know about is the genome in the DNA, but there's also another level of information that's just as important and even more complex that's the epigenome and those are the structures that control how the DNA is bundled and shaped and which genes out of the 25,000 get turned on and off when we're forming an embryo and we develop and those genes can be switched on and off depending on how we live if we put our bodies in a state of a perceived adversity or adversity that isn't too damaging the epigenome will actually respond and be more stable so the idea If we put our bodies in a state of perceived adversity or adversity that isn't too damaging, the epigenome will actually respond and be more stable.
Starting point is 00:14:54 So the idea is you want to stabilize your epigenome so that your cells remember how to function youthfully for longer. The analogy as shown in this slide is a compact disc. Hopefully all of you remember what those things are. Barely. Incredible technology. You could fit about 20 songs on there. When I teach at Harvard, the kids are like, what are you talking about? So if you're young, it's like resetting a computer or pressing the buttons on the side of your iPhone. So the analogy is that the
Starting point is 00:15:18 digital information is the DNA, and that's the music, but you need to read it. It's not just pits on a metallic disc. The epigenome is the equivalent of the reader of that information, and the songs are the genes. And aging, I believe, and our new paper presents very strong evidence this is the case, that aging is akin to scratches on the CD so that the cells still have the music, the genes, but they're just not read correctly at the right time in the right place so that your cells forget how to work.
Starting point is 00:15:50 So we see that brain cells become more like skin cells and skin cells become more like kidney cells. We become a melange instead of highly differentiated functioning youthful cells. And so that's the information theory of aging. And what we found out in this paper is what drives that process in large part is broken dna avoid x-rays ct scans if you can help it um don't fly too much if you can help it yeah well don't do what i do and uh and live what were ways that actually prevent those breaks because that disrupts the epigenome we showed but here's the the cool point is that we've discovered you can polish off those scratches and get back the beautiful music of cells and their youth. So that's
Starting point is 00:16:30 extraordinary. There's a concept that has been talked about for some time of longevity escape velocity, that there's a moment in time that for every year that you're alive, science can extend your life for more than a year. And I think the numbers that people talk about today is that for every four years, we're adding a year of life. Where are you on this? And what do you think will reach longevity escape velocity? How far out are we? Well, so we get about three months for every year we stay alive,
Starting point is 00:17:04 currently, without breakthroughs like the one I'm talking about. Let me give you an update on where we are today. Please. And whatever you're willing to say, I know some of it's amazing. And we can extrapolate from here, but remember it's not linear. Yes. There's one thing you know from this conference. The journey has been a rapid one. We
Starting point is 00:17:28 made this discovery that you can reset the age of cells, human tissue, mouse tissue, living mice. What is it now? It's about five years ago. It was published three years ago. It was published three years ago. We started working on mice. We reset the eyeballs of mice to be young again. They got their vision back. That was the cover of Nature. That got the cover of Nature.
Starting point is 00:17:56 December 2020. Third row, far right slide. Yeah, we were very fortunate. Nature was bold enough to put the title Turning Turning Back Time, on the cover of their magazine Very honored by that. And this is the paper that changed everything for my lab, for my outlook about aging And what we've done since then is we've formed a company called Life Biosciences And they've been pushing ahead for all those years We've done extensive studies in mice. We needed to know if it was safe. It's
Starting point is 00:18:25 very safe. We've never seen anything negative after years of work and driving this process. We found that those three genes, O, S, and K for short, these are gene regulators that set off a cascade of events during embryogenesis to make a young human. Turns out, lucky for all of us, I think, is that those three genes also set back the clock in adult cells without causing tumors or any disease. And without bringing them back so far that they've lost identity. And this is the thing that blows my mind,
Starting point is 00:18:58 is you'd think that if you just keep it on for a long time, you'd go back to zero, age zero, which you don't want. It's not true. Cells go back about 80% and stop. There's a barrier that prevents them from going back to zero if we leave off that other gene. It's a gift to humanity. For sure. And so now we're at the point where we're conducting,
Starting point is 00:19:20 at Life Biosciences, a Boston-based company, non-human primates. These are green monkey studies. I should say, the reason that there's an iris on this cover is that we show that you could reverse blindness due to glaucoma and also old age by resetting the age of the retina back to youth. And those mice got their full vision back again.
Starting point is 00:19:42 So think about this. Your body, if this is true, the body looks old, but it's actually, it just needs to be reset. So I don't think of an old person now as an old person. I think it's just a body that needs to be reset. Polished. So this is a big deal because, I mean, one of the critiques about the work that you
Starting point is 00:20:04 and other individuals in this field have done is it's all done in mice, you know, that's great but we're humans, you know mice get all the benefits but But non-human primates is a big deal we share 99.99% of our genetic code with them we do and then and so I've Had a sneak peek at the results and I would say things look rather promising at this point. It's a big deal, guys. It's a very big deal. And so it's my prediction that we'll be in the next 18 months or two years, testing our first age-reversed clinical trial in humans to cure blindness. And those studies are actually being planned right now. And the material to do that
Starting point is 00:20:52 is being manufactured. How are you guys feeling about your longevity mindsets now? Everybody, I want to take a quick break from our episode and tell you about a health product that I love and that I use every day. In fact, I use it twice a day. It's called Seed Health. Now your microbiome and gut health are one of the most important and modifiable parts of your health plan. Your gut microbiome is connected to your brain health, your cardiac health, your metabolic health. So the question is, what are you doing to optimize your gut? Let me take a second to tell you what I'm doing. Every day, I take two capsules of Seeds Daily Symbiotic. It's a two-in-one probiotic and prebiotic formulation that supports digestive health, gut health, skin health, heart health, and more. It contains 24 clinically studied and
Starting point is 00:21:41 scientifically backed probiotic strains that are deliberate in a patented capsule that actually protects it from the stomach acid and ensures that all of it reaches your colon alive with 100% survivability. Now, if you want to try Seed's daily symbiotic for yourself, you can get a 25% off your first month's supply by using the code moonshots at checkout. Just go to seed.com backslash moonshots and enter the code moonshots at checkout. That's seeds.com backslash moonshots and use the code moonshots to get 25% off your first month of Seeds Daily Symbiotic. Trust me, your gut will thank you. All right, let's get back to our episode. You know, we're going back to our episode you know we're going to be thank you we're going to be visiting your lab um during the longevity platinum trip in august and september um how many graduate students do you have there what's the setup that you have that we'll be
Starting point is 00:22:36 meeting uh yeah i don't know if you had this experience but every day i go into my lab and i'm surprised how small it is it's just like Elon Musk says if you have dedicated people who know really how to make a difference and look forward rather than today they can achieve anything and so I've got this small group of around 20 bright-eyed young PhD students and postdocs who perform all this magic and uh it's a pretty small lab it's about a thousand square feet we do it all there perform all this magic and it's a pretty small labs about a thousand square feet we do it all there and uh yeah it's uh to me it's it's it's amazing to walk in there and i never get tired of showing people around because it's it's like magic you go in and you see um actually i think the next slide might be interesting click to the right and what you'll see is that we're now growing
Starting point is 00:23:23 uh human brains have any of you seen these organoids? To grow these organoids? Probably many of you have seen this. So on the left, we have cerebral organoids grown from human tissue. We can now, I think we're the only lab now that can make these brains get really old. We can make them 70 years old within a matter of weeks. Now they develop dementia. We can measure that with these electrodes on the right.
Starting point is 00:23:43 We grow them on these little electrodes. And then we can, and we do reverse the age of those little organoids and they get their thinking ability back whatever that is we do see the electrical activity come back sometimes they grow little eyes as well it's kind of cool amazing uh but why why do we do that it's not just cool it actually tells us that the whole brain is reversible and we've actually done this now in mice we haven't published this so you've heard it here first that we can reverse the age of an old mouse's brain So they have dementia. We spend three weeks reversing the age of the brain We just give them an intravenous injection of our therapy turn it on for four weeks and
Starting point is 00:24:19 Those mice have a young brain and they have their ability to learn again so I imagine a day where we will have an infusion either in our eye or in our whole body. And we just take a drug to turn those genes on. We use doxycycline, just your antibiotic. As a trigger for those genes. It's the trigger. We don't need an antibiotic. It's not used as an antibiotic. It's an on-off switch, but we can reset the body. And so after the eye eye we're going to go after hearing and dementia. Yes, and there will be a day I believe where you will be able to rejuvenate your brain and get back memories get your ability to learn again Wow Let's give it up for that. I Mean are you guys hearing the same thing? I just want to jump up and down here. I mean so I
Starting point is 00:25:03 listen I up and down here. I mean, so, listen, I've asked Ray Kurzweil, I've asked George Church, and now I'm asking you this idea of a longevity escape velocity target date. Let me give you a couple of decades and tell me, you know, as a betting man under over, within the next decade, in the second decade, in the third decade? Do you mean escape velocity or the singularity? When we will have the ability to go and get a mechanism that will allow us to basically age in place or age in reverse so that we're no longer, you know,
Starting point is 00:25:46 if every year we're alive, we're extending our lifespan for more than a year. Well, it's already here. It's just not available widely. It's already here, ladies and gentlemen. At least if you're a mouse. Well, so I'm not talking about our therapy. That one is, that's hardcore. That's a rocket versus the Wright brothers. But there are technologies now
Starting point is 00:26:12 and some published papers that... Are you talking about like rapamycin? Rapamycin and combinations. So Greg Fahey has done good work, continues to do good work on combinations of molecules that have age reversal properties. So I believe that there are already molecules and drugs that you can use to reset your age somewhat, not go back to being 30 years old again if you're my age.
Starting point is 00:26:36 Our ability in my lab, and presumably scientists across the world if they're smart, to use AI to answer questions that we were not able to. they're smart to use AI to answer questions that we were not able to. You know, I wake up and poor Serena, my partner who's here with me, knows that I read papers first thing in the morning, usually. And so that is a real tax on my brain, but I can only cover 100 papers a morning. 7,000 papers published in the medical science every day Yeah, it so that alone ability to synthesize that every day would be great and it we're doing that now but just ability to ask AI how to Find the best molecules that can mimic the OSK gene therapy. You can ask AI that you can get decent answers
Starting point is 00:27:22 so we are going to have Exponentially You can ask AI that. You can get decent answers. So we are going to have exponentially, exponential increases in the pace of this field. So it's not just AI helping us be superhuman. It's also the funding level, the amount of money that has gone into certain companies in this area. Since we published that paper in Nature, there's been investment in the billions of dollars. You're a builder, and Jeff Bezos, Evolution,
Starting point is 00:27:50 I was showing him some of the companies earlier that are capitalized. And the reason is, perhaps to state the obvious, is that this is an area that's no longer the backwater of biology. It really, it's pharmaceutical development, and those that capture that land will be the dominant industry of this century. Amazing. One of the points I remember in
Starting point is 00:28:11 discussion with you and George Church was that it's likely that a real rejuvenation therapeutic will, if it works for one tissue an organ will work for the entire body that's also lucky but it's true that's what we find in animals now we haven't I haven't injected myself yet I'm probably not going to do that for a few years but in in mice I'm shocked that what works in the eye in the optic nerves the nerve cells works in the epithelial cells in the retina, works in the outer layer of cells on the retina, works in the kidney we just published, the muscle. If it works in all those different cell types, I think it's a universal process of biology to be
Starting point is 00:28:57 able to be reset. And so that's why I'm not exaggerating when I think a whole body reset is coming. Amazing. One of the things that we talk about on the longevity platinum trips usually is this idea of gene therapies using these, basically these molecular robots, the adeno-associated viruses, and where you can target your virus towards particular tissues. Well, that's what we do. We have a domesticated virus, the AAV, which is already used and approved by the FDA. Our system's a little bit more advanced, the one that we co-developed with George. And that is, it's a two-part system where you need both parts,
Starting point is 00:29:35 but it's also inducible. So right now, as far as I'm aware, nobody else is developing a product in the clinic that has an on-off switch. I think that's important for two reasons to make that happen, even though it's triply expensive. Can I just, as you're setting this up, you're saying we're going to put these three genes, the OSK genes, in all the cells of your body, but we're going to have to turn it on, otherwise it's inactive.
Starting point is 00:30:06 It starts out off, correct. Yeah. And that's what we did in this paper in Nature and this new one in Cell, is that we have exquisite control over when these genes come on for safety reasons, but also because we now know, in the mice at least, you can reset multiple times. So that you'll have this treatment, your body will be filled with these genes, they'll be off. And if we get sick, or if we get injured, or if we get too old, we can take a course of an antibiotic for a couple of months and get reset every time. Or if we're in the emergency room, they give you an infusion of doxycycline. On come these repair genes, your nose regrow, your spine regenerates, et cetera. Amazing. Amazing.
Starting point is 00:30:54 You know, Tony and I were blessed to be able to provide you, you know, to give you, gift you a quarter million dollar donation for your lab. Where are you? If you had unlimited funding, which hopefully you will, you don't yet, where would you be experimenting? Where would you be going next? Yeah, I would put a lot of effort in the next generation
Starting point is 00:31:18 of age reversal technologies. Right now it's a gene therapy, which means it's going to be expensive and hard to fulfill our dreams of changing humanity. That said, what we want to do is we want to turn those gene therapies into a pill. And so you can take a course of a pill and get the same effect. And it's actually easier to distribute molecules than it is viruses.
Starting point is 00:31:47 So I would expand that group and screen millions of molecules for those ones that in combination could be taken. Either you could have a cosmetic company, you could have probably one of the biggest pharmaceutical companies. That's an area I think is super important to get ahead of. Hey everybody, this is Peter. A quick break from the episode. I'm a firm believer that science and technology and how entrepreneurs can change the world is the only real news out there worth consuming. I don't watch the crisis news network I call CNN
Starting point is 00:32:21 or Fox and hear every devastating piece of news on the planet. I spend my time training my neural net the way I see the world by looking at the incredible breakthroughs in science and technology, how entrepreneurs are solving the world's grand challenges, what the breakthroughs are in longevity, how exponential technologies are transforming our world. So twice a week, I put out a blog. One blog is looking at the future of longevity, age reversal, biotech, increasing your health span. The other blog looks at exponential technologies, AI, 3D printing, synthetic biology, AR, VR, blockchain. These technologies are transforming what you as an entrepreneur can do.
Starting point is 00:33:04 If this is the kind of news you want to learn about and shape your neural nets with, go to demandist.com backslash blog and learn more. Now back to the episode. One of the questions that people ask you and me all the time is, is this just a treatment for the wealthy? And we saw the study done by London School of Business, Oxford, Harvard, that reducing age one year in the global population adds 38 trillion dollars to global economy, so it really is an uplifting of humanity. So you think we will get, as we get to volume, we will get to a point where this is accessible, affordable, and made available to everybody
Starting point is 00:33:48 Or I'll die trying or you know, that's the goal I'm really optimistic. I already have some molecules in the lab that show signs of age reversal But there again, you know, I want to build a Concord real fast Let's hit on a few other quick things rap Rapamycin? Yeah. Are you taking it? On and off, yes. I'm taking six milligrams once a week. Metformin? Yeah, daily when I remember. When you remember, yes. Well, Serena I'm sure is there to help out when she can. You've gone vegan. Have you always been vegan? No, I was pseudo-Mediterranean about two years ago, which I thought was healthy. Red wine, cheese. It was a great life.
Starting point is 00:34:38 But unfortunately, I was losing my memory, and I really wasn't that... I mean, I was about seven or eight years younger than my actual age, according to InsideTracker, a testing company. I met Serena Poon, who's here in the audience, who Peter's been referencing, I've been referencing. She's, among other things, a nutritionist, but also a longevity expert. And a lot of things I don't know she does. And one of those things is what to eat.
Starting point is 00:35:04 So she turned me on to veganism. Now, I would say I'm a struggling vegan. I still have butter and milk occasionally. I'll occasionally have some alcohol. But I do try to be plant-focused as much as I can. And it turns out I love plant stuff. I love hummus and baba ghanoush and all that stuff. So I don't just eat salads. But what surprised me when I switched to listen to Serena is that I measure myself in many ways, as I think you all know. I went back another two years in my biological age, just in a couple of months after switching to that diet. So I've been convinced. Now, I think there are a lot of people who say, well, I got to have my meat, got to have my alcohol. I would say just try to temper it, especially the alcohol.
Starting point is 00:35:47 Yeah. My father used to say, pan, metron, I just done everything in moderation. Talk about mitochondria. I mean, the powerhouse, you know, the whole NMN, NAD complex, but the number of mitochondria fall off as we age and the efficiency of them. That's one of the hallmarks of aging. Yeah, it is. So there are about a dozen hallmarks now we keep adding on. And these are really underlying causes of aging. Mitochondrial dysfunction is one of them. Though I think that epigenetic changes drive a lot of these, including mitochondrial effects, because when we reset the age of the cell, the mitochondria get rejuvenated, which is good news. Now, these power packs decline NMN and
Starting point is 00:36:29 boosters of NAD, rejuvenate mitochondria, and that's been shown to be highly beneficial in animals and now in people. And so one of the things that you want to do is make sure that your battery packs, your mitochondria stay healthy and numerous. And that's one of the reasons exercise and fasting are beneficial, is that your body boosts the mitochond numerous. And that's one of the reasons exercise and fasting are beneficial, is that your body boosts the mitochondria. And your fasting regime right now, has it changed at all? Are you still one meal a day? I try. I ate a little bit of lunch, as you saw.
Starting point is 00:36:57 I really try. Serena will tell you, I struggle. I think you ate a piece of cauliflower. Yeah, you know, it's really hard. I agree that just having one meal a day is a challenge. I think it's okay if you're not perfect. I try to skip breakfast, I try to skip lunch, I'm not always successful. But in general, my average day looks like most of my calories are eaten within a six-hour window. And so you're getting enough protein to keep your muscle mass. We've talked a lot about
Starting point is 00:37:23 the importance of muscle and reversing sarcopenia as we age. Yeah, I Do so I think if you if you don't pay attention to what you eat and you just eat lettuce leaves You're not going to do it. But we're Serena and I very carefully we focus on legumes and we we Those plants that have high protein content and nutrition and that's the key You need to educate yourself on what to eat not just when to eat those plants that have high protein content and nutrition. And that's the key. You need to educate yourself on what to eat, not just when to eat.
Starting point is 00:37:53 I think I promoted Lifespan more than any of my own books. It was just such a beautiful book. You're very kind. And I think it's important. It's waking people up to the possibility to give them hope and to give them a mindset. You have another book you're working on. Right. When do we expect that? What's it going to be about? Well, also congrats on your book, Lifeforce. It's sold very well and I think deservedly so.
Starting point is 00:38:17 There's a whole chapter in the book that Tony and I wrote about David. Yeah, well, thank you again for that. That was kind and if you haven't read life force well worth it So yeah, the book two is Everything that you wanted to know that wasn't in lifespan will be in this one So I'm thinking about calling it lifespan too, it's really a journey through second life through time That's a good one. Yeah a journey through time looking at what makes us human, what's in our genetic makeup and our epigenetic makeup that we can learn from in how to live our lives
Starting point is 00:38:54 through this tumultuous time where society is trying to not just kill us but make us age rapidly. Our lifestyles of sitting and eating and lack of exercise, stress, even social media is really bad. These are things that put the body in a state of complacency. And this book will be in the same way Lifespan was the textbook, this will be the guidebook of how to live in today's world and beyond. Amazing. You know, you pinned a tweet in which you talk about the factors
Starting point is 00:39:29 that are counter to a longer, healthier life. Smoking, for sure. That's the worst. The worst. Alcohol intake. Again, new data says alcohol is worse than I even thought. So if you want your resveratrol, take the pill, not the red wine. Definitely.
Starting point is 00:39:48 Okay. Waist size. What? Waist size? Yeah. Yeah. So people who are overweight have, in general, an older epigenetic age than those who stay at a BMI between say 21 and 24 so that's a fact so if you want to age slower maintain your BMI in
Starting point is 00:40:12 what's considered a healthy range. Inflammatory CRP levels yep that's something good yeah it's the underlying killer for so much. For sure for sure and there are foods that you eat that can be inflammatory. For instance, some of us have a reaction to dairy or to certain grains. Be careful about that. You don't want that. Your gut is very important for inflammation.
Starting point is 00:40:36 You don't want bacteria getting into your gut, lodging in your bloodstream or in your brain. That can cause these diseases that we all know of. So yeah, keep inflammation low. And one of the best ways to do that is to not just eat well, but also make sure that you're not allergic to things in your environment. And you can do blood tests to make sure that's not happening. David, it's an honor to call you as a friend. I'm grateful to have you here.
Starting point is 00:41:03 Thank you for all you're doing. Likewise, sir. Thank you, sir. Let's give it up for David Sequeira!

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