Chocolate and red wine are secret to beating wrinkles

  • Lab researchers made old cells both look and behave ‘younger’
  • They did this by applying compounds found in red grapes and blueberries
  • The cells had longer telomeres, which shorten as we get older causing ageing
  • These foods are rich in flavonoids, known for their antioxidant effects

The secret to staying youthful is eating chocolate and drinking red wine, researchers claim.

Scientists discovered both helped to rejuvenate old cells, making them look younger and start to behave more like young cells.

When we age, the strands of DNA in our cells gradually lose the protective telomeres, which that act like the plastic tips at the end of shoelaces. 

The team applied compounds based on chemicals naturally found in red wine, dark chocolate, red grapes and blueberries to cells in the laboratory.

These foods are rich in flavonoids, which are known for their antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects. 

Researchers found compounds found in chocolate and red wine rejuvenated old cells in the lab (stock photo)

Within hours of treatment, with these so-called reversatrol analogues, the older cells started to divide, and had longer telomeres. 

It is hoped the breakthrough could lead to anti-ageing therapies.

A DAILY GLASS OF WINE HELPS PROTECT YOUR HEART 

Drinking a glass of wine or a bottle of beer a night could slash your risk of an early death by a fifth.

Moderate drinking – defined as up to seven drinks a week for women and 14 for men – significantly cuts the risk of dying from heart disease and other problems, a study has found.

The research, conducted among more than 300,000 Americans, directly contradicts official guidance published by the British chief medical officer.

Dame Sally Davies has stated there is ‘no safe level’ of drinking.

But while some evidence suggests drinking any amount may increase the risk of certain cancers, experts have said the benefits to the heart ‘clearly outweigh’ these risks, particularly among the elderly.

The research came from the University of Texas and Shandong University in China.

Key findings  

The work of the team at Exeter University, supported by researchers at Brighton University, builds on their earlier findings which showed that a class of genes called splicing factors are progressively switched off as we age.

Lead researcher Professor Harries said: ‘This is a first step in trying to make people live normal lifespans, but with health for their entire life.

‘Our data suggests that using chemicals to switch back on the major class of genes that are switched off as we age might provide a means to restore function to old cells.’

Dr Eva Latorre, research associate at the University of Exeter, who carried out the experiments, was surprised by the extent and rapidity of the changes in the cells.

She said: ‘When I saw some of the cells in the culture dish rejuvenating I couldn’t believe it.

‘These old cells were looking like young cells. It was like magic.

‘I repeated the experiments several times and in each case the cells rejuvenated. I am very excited by the implications and potential for this research.’

The research was published in the journal BMJ Cell Biology.

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