Methionine/Cysteine restriction increases longetivity AND energy expenditure
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@Benjo this is what I’m always curious about. It seems like it would be tough to construct a diet low in methionine, while hitting key macros/micros, but maybe it’s as simple as the rice diet three days a week? Despite the name, patients on the rice diet ate fruit, juice, and sugar in addition to the rice, (and I have a personal theory that you could add butter to the rice and still have it work-just to make it a little more palatable).
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Protein restriction might be the best option to increase FGF21 and thus longevity, but not the easiest. Something that everybody can do at home and that Peat had recommended for decades is to eat lots of carbs.
This human study shows that Increasing carb intake is way more effective at increasing FGF21 than incresaing fat intake.
The protein intake was the same during the whole study.The FGF21 concentration increased 8-fold in the high carb group!
"After CHO, plasma FGF21 concentration increased 8-fold compared to CON (329 ± 99 vs. 39 ± 9 pg ml-1, p < 0.05)."
So protein restriction might not even be necessary.
Another interesting fun fact is that the high carb diet increased the concentration of palmitoleic acid by almost 150%. Its interesting that when the body makes new fat that it is a pro-metabolic MUFA. Palmitoelic acid is contained in macadamia nuts a lot.
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I always suspected there was more to semaglutide than it lowering appetite.
It increases FGF21 sensitivity. So in a way it is mimicking methionine restriction.
In many diseases FGF21 is high (I assume as an adaptive response), but similarly as in diabetes and insulin, their body is resistant to it. So there is such a thing as FGF21 resistance, which is ameliorated by semaglutide, leading to weight loss.
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This is a plant based diet. It is low in methionine. Not zero, but low compared to adding animal products.
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@Mauritio great find, thank you!!
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T3 increases FGF21 as well.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20236931/ -
@evan-hinkle you might be right regarding the rice diet. Rice does have protein, of course. But if the diet included plenty of fruit and sugar, and maybe coconut oil or butter, the percent of methionine could be low enough. Cronometer is reasonably helpful crunching those ratios.
Brad Marshall of fireinabottle and the old croissant diet of a couple years ago has been doing something similar, except he's focusing on the branch chain amino acids (valine, leucine, and isoleucine) instead of methionine. He's also more into starch, so he's doing casava pancakes and sweet potato rice noodles (which have zero protein and virtually no nutrients.)
OJ is an easy base for the diet because of the nutrient values (considerable in a whole gallon) but that much liquid could be a turn-off.
I've been dabbling with this idea for a couple days. It's hard for me to drink morning coffee without milk. I may go back to using cream or even coconut cream and see how it feels.
I'd love to hear anyone's experience/success trying this.
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@Benjo - I have been leaning into a lower methionine diet for several months. I keep methionine below 1 gram/day and my cysteine is in the same ballpark. It is very doable for me. I do not obsess about getting my methionine closer to zero.
I typically get most of my calories from white rice, lentils and sweet potatoes. If you look to epidemiological studies, billions of Chinese have lived on a rice based diet for generations. The traditional Okinawan diet was based on sweet potatoes.
I am a full-grown male and I am not concerned about stunting my growth. I have an inexpensive bioimpedance scale that I purchased years ago. It montiors about 10 different things and I pay attention my muscle weight and bone weight to make sure I am doing no harm to myself.
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I used to do juice fasting when I first tried to fix my thyroid. At the time I drank juices that had a ton of veggies in them, but you could easily swap that out for predominantly fruity juices.
If one really only needs to restrict methionine for 3 days a week, perhaps three single day juice days, (non-consecutive) a week would be another method. I always found juices very satiating, (you would think they wouldn’t be, but they are pretty dense).
I’m just trying to come up with as many example diets as possible, and hoping that you all can poke holes in them for me.
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I'm skeptical of NAC supplementation for this reason, as well as for the fact that NAC supplementation does not raise glutathione levels except in acute cases of stark depletion
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My diet includes about 10 grams of glycine each day. I add glycine in part to try to reduce the negative effects of glyphosate that is sprayed on our commerically produced foods. Glycine also helps with reducing the impact of methionine.
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@Mauritio said in Methionine/Cysteine restriction increases longetivity AND energy expenditure:
Concentric exercise, in this case, treadmill uphill walk variations, increase FGF21 by 66% in 2 weeks in humans
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22701542/Interestingly upstairs walking, a form a concentric exercise, has by far the highest calorie expenditure amongst all the sports tested.
https://x.com/T3MaxxiAlt/status/1759793246769987880
BTW if anyone finds any other ways to boost FGF22 let me know. I feel like boosting FGF22 is a better way key to get the benefits of MR without having to eat in a too restricted way.
I think methionine restriction boosts FGF22 something like 800% and I have yet to find anything else that comes even close to that . -
My diet includes a large amount of glycine. Yesterday I entered my food into cronometer.com and my methionine:glycine ratio was about 1:10. I suspect that the effect from low methionine and the effect of high glycine are additive. From 2023:
Glycine and aging: Evidence and mechanisms
Highlights
• The simple amino acid glycine extends lifespan in worms, mice, and rats.• Glycine also improves aspects of health in mammalian models of age-related disease.
• Glycine is the acceptor for GNMT, an enzyme responsible for methionine clearance.
• GNMT also converts glycine to sarcosine, an autophagy-inducing metabolite.
• Glycine may prolong life by inducing autophagy and mimicking methionine restriction.
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@Mauritio - This 10-minute YouTube video was posted 3 days ago and it suggests ways to increase FGF21. I am thinking that they are all additive.
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@DavidPS said in Methionine/Cysteine restriction increases longetivity AND energy expenditure:
My diet includes a large amount of glycine. Yesterday I entered my food into cronometer.com and my methionine:glycine ratio was about 1:10. I suspect that the effect from low methionine and the effect of high glycine are additive. From 2023:
Glycine and aging: Evidence and mechanisms
Highlights
• The simple amino acid glycine extends lifespan in worms, mice, and rats.• Glycine also improves aspects of health in mammalian models of age-related disease.
• Glycine is the acceptor for GNMT, an enzyme responsible for methionine clearance.
• GNMT also converts glycine to sarcosine, an autophagy-inducing metabolite.
• Glycine may prolong life by inducing autophagy and mimicking methionine restriction.
Thanks
Wasn't the increase in longevity from glycine "only" about 8%? That's quite far from MR which achieved between 30-40%. So this suggests that glycine isn't enough to mimic MR. -
@Mauritio - I apologize for the confusion. I agree that MR is superior to glycine for longevity. MR also has benefits for starving cancer.
As you can see, the greatest source of methionine comes from foods of animal origin, especially chicken and fish. I am unwilling to adopt a diet based solely on plant foods and I use glycine to balance the methionine in my diet (after I have reduced it to an level that I still find appetizing).
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@DavidPS
Sorry for the confusion as well.
The 800% increase in FGF21 was actually from the high carb diet. And as the person in the video you posted explained, they ate pasta, bread, corn and drank juices.Im going to look into that study more, mainly because it is a human study and the increase was so high.
Now compare that to the low protein study (also in humans) and they only had a 150% increase after 4 weeks.So it seems high carb is more important than low protein!
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@Mauritio said in Methionine/Cysteine restriction increases longetivity AND energy expenditure:
@DavidPS
Sorry for the confusion as well.
The 800% increase in FGF21 was actually from the high carb diet. And as the person in the video you posted explained, they ate pasta, bread, corn and drank juices.Im going to look into that study more, mainly because it is human and the increase is so high.
Now compare that to the low protein study (also in humans) and they only had a 150% increase after 4 weeks.So it seems high carb is more important than low protein!
This is actually an excellent study. Aswers a lot of questions.
Again: high carb, seems more important than low protein. And low fat (PUFA) is important, too.
They used the following diets:
High carb: (80 E% carbohydrate, 11 E% protein, 9 E% fat)
High fat: (10 E% carbohydrate, 12 E% protein, 78 E% fat)
Control: (62 E% carbohydrates, 14 E% protein, 24 E% fat)The dfference in FGF21 between high carb and control is massive, yet the control group also ate a lot of carbs and the protein was almost the same, so the only factor that strongly differs is the fat content, which is 2,5 times higher in the control diet.
Leading me to believe that this is crucial as well: high carb AND low fat. If it was only the carbs than the control diet should have outperformed the high fat diet ,which it didn't.This underlines what Peat said for a long time that: a high carb, low/medium protein, low fat is very healthy.
I think you can go higher on protein if it is gelatin. And maybe higher on fat if it is SFA ? Im going to look into the realtionship between SFA and FGF21.Another thing we should look into is all the protein restriction animal studies.
Are they really low protein studies ? Or high carb,low protein?What is the diet of the control groups in these studies?Btw fasting is not effective in humand to boost FGF21: "...an increase in circulating FGF21 concentration is not detected until after 7–10 days of starvation in humans ..."
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This study shows that the type of carbohdyrate matters: sucrose is superior to starch, in terms of FGF21.
Eventhough the 2 experimental diets have on paper the same ratio of carbs, protein and fat, they have very different outcomes. The group that had a higher sucrose ratio in their carbs had a higher metabolism, much higher UCP and FGF21, lower triglycerides, etc...
This makes the results of the above mentioned human study even more impressive, since they ate a lot of starch but managed to increase FGF21 by 800%. It probably would have been even more, if they had eaten more sucrose and less starch.
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This study(https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25133427/#:~:text=FGF21 therefore represents an endocrine,periods of reduced protein intake.) makes the necessary diet even clearer.
In indivuduals that ate the same carbs but differing protein(and fat) contents, they showed that only the low protein group had an increase in FGF21 of about 170%So low protein, does work for increasing FGF21, but not nearly as well as high carb (and low protein). And it does work despite fat beeing at 52% of total calories. So itsnt impossible to increase FGF21 while eating high fat. I just suspect that high carb, low fat, low protein is the ideal diet for that.
Low protein,medium fat ,medium carbs: +170%
Low protein,high carb, low fat : +800%