Skip to content

Lower Calorie Intake Provides Brain Boost

29 December 2011 | no comments | Tech News

[TECH NEWS]

A low caloric diet changes the chemistry in the brain, enhancing both cognitive performance and memory, a discovery which scientists hope will yield new drugs to arrest the cognitive decline associated with aging. The research appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and was carried out by scientists from the Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Rome. Caloric restriction (in this case defined as eating only 70 percent of the food normally consumed) is already known as a way to increase longevity. It has also been observed in animal models that caloric restriction appears to slow the effects of aging on the brain. However, the precise molecular mechanism behind the positive effects of this hypocaloric diet on the brain remained unknown until now. Researcher Giovambattista Pani said the brain boost is triggered by a molecule known as CREB1. He found that CREB1 activates genes linked to both longevity and the optimal functioning of the brain. Pani’s team discovered that CREB1 mediates the beneficial effects of diet on the brain by turning on another group of molecules linked to longevity—the sirtuins.

Dec 20, 2011, ScienceAgogo

Share Our Article

  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • Newsvine
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Related Posts

Comments

There are no comments on this entry.

Trackbacks

There are no trackbacks on this entry.