Thursday, October 31, 2013

Today's Natural Cure: Natural Food

This article excerpt is from  liveinthenow.com

How Some Foods Can Change Your Genetic Destiny


Have you ever wondered how and why certain people seem to appear either younger or much older than their actual chronological age? Certainly genetic inheritance has some impact on aging, development of chronic conditions and longevity, but an abundance of new research is demonstrating through the science of epigenetics that how our genes are expressed to protect us from illness and an early demise is fully within our control. Lifestyle, exposure to environmental hazards and to an even greater degree, the quality, composition and type of foods we consume play a large role in determining how we age as well as how and when we will die.

Healthy Natural Food Diet Alters DNA Methylation to Promote Health and Extend Lifespan

A nutritional research team from Newcastle University in the UK have reported the results of a study in the journal Aging Cell that explains how molecular changes to our genes, known as epigenetic marks, are driven mainly by aging but are also affected by what we eat. Scientists have been revealing the cellular impact that molecular compounds such as  and have on genetic expression and human metabolism over the past decade. These natural chemical structures are shown to have a dramatic impact on disease prevention by altering genetic markers through epigenetics.

Researchers examined the cell linings from a group of colonoscopy volunteers to determine the impact of diet on polyp formation, a biomarker of aging and future colon  occurrence. The volunteers were free of  or inflammatory bowel disease and continued to eat their regular diet. The scientists looked for epigenetic changes, identified as DNA methylation markers, which do not alter the genetic code but affect whether the genes are turned on or off. Epigenetic markers are a strong predictor of precancerous growth and future incidence of the disease.

Consume a Natural Food Diet, Void of Processed and Fried Foods to Prevent Chronic Illnesses

The study team found that men tended to have a higher frequency of these epigenetic changesthan women, which is consistent with men being at a greater risk of bowel cancer. Participants with higher  status tended to show lower levels of methylation, and a similar effect was observed for the mineral . The finding was consistent with the known links between higher and selenium levels and reduced bowel cancer risk.
Conversely, extraordinarily high levels of the B-vitamin folate was associated with increased levels of epigenetic changes linked with bowel cancer in those genetically susceptible. Further, the study found relationships between body size (height, weight and waist circumference) and epigenetic changes. The information provided by this work helps to validate a wealth of prior studies that explain how diet and the environment alter genetic markers to promote or damage health. Maintaining a normal body weight and consuming a natural diet, void of processed and fried foods promotes epigenetic changes that keep us healthy and extend lifespan.
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