Wegman Martin P, Guo Michael H, Bennion Douglas M, Shankar Meena N, Chrzanowski Stephen M, Goldberg Leslie A, Xu Jinze, Williams Tiffany A, Lu Xiaomin, Hsu Stephen I, Anton Stephen D, Leeuwenburgh Christiaan, Brantly Mark L
1 University of Florida College of Medicine , Gainesville, Florida.
Rejuvenation Res. 2015 Apr;18(2):162-72. doi: 10.1089/rej.2014.1624.
Caloric restriction has consistently been shown to extend life span and ameliorate aging-related diseases. These effects may be due to diet-induced reactive oxygen species acting to up-regulate sirtuins and related protective pathways, which research suggests may be partially inhibited by dietary anti-oxidant supplementation. Because caloric restriction is not sustainable long term for most humans, we investigated an alternative dietary approach, intermittent fasting (IF), which is proposed to act on similar biological pathways. We hypothesized that a modified IF diet, where participants maintain overall energy balance by alternating between days of fasting (25% of normal caloric intake) and feasting (175% of normal), would increase expression of genes associated with aging and reduce oxidative stress and that these effects would be suppressed by anti-oxidant supplementation. To assess the tolerability of the diet and to explore effects on biological mechanisms related to aging and metabolism, we recruited a cohort of 24 healthy individuals in a double-crossover, double-blinded, randomized clinical trial. Study participants underwent two 3-week treatment periods-IF and IF with anti-oxidant (vitamins C and E) supplementation. We found strict adherence to study-provided diets and that participants found the diet tolerable, with no adverse clinical findings or weight change. We detected a marginal increase (2.7%) in SIRT3 expression due to the IF diet, but no change in expression of other genes or oxidative stress markers analyzed. We also found that IF decreased plasma insulin levels (1.01 μU/mL). Although our study suggests that the IF dieting paradigm is acceptable in healthy individuals, additional research is needed to further assess the potential benefits and risks.
热量限制一直被证明可以延长寿命并改善与衰老相关的疾病。这些作用可能是由于饮食诱导的活性氧上调了沉默调节蛋白和相关的保护途径,研究表明饮食中的抗氧化剂补充可能会部分抑制这些途径。由于热量限制对大多数人来说长期不可持续,我们研究了另一种饮食方法——间歇性禁食(IF),它被认为作用于类似的生物学途径。我们假设一种改良的IF饮食,即参与者通过在禁食日(正常热量摄入的25%)和盛宴日(正常热量摄入的175%)之间交替来维持总体能量平衡,会增加与衰老相关的基因表达并降低氧化应激,并且这些作用会被抗氧化剂补充所抑制。为了评估该饮食的耐受性并探索其对与衰老和代谢相关的生物学机制的影响,我们在一项双交叉、双盲、随机临床试验中招募了24名健康个体。研究参与者经历了两个为期3周的治疗期——IF和补充抗氧化剂(维生素C和E)的IF。我们发现参与者严格遵守研究提供的饮食,并且他们认为该饮食可以耐受,没有不良临床发现或体重变化。我们检测到由于IF饮食,SIRT3表达略有增加(2.7%),但分析的其他基因或氧化应激标志物的表达没有变化。我们还发现IF降低了血浆胰岛素水平(1.01μU/mL)。尽管我们的研究表明IF饮食模式在健康个体中是可以接受的,但仍需要进一步研究来进一步评估其潜在的益处和风险。