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Acai Berries Extend Fruit Flies' Lifespan: Study

by Sheela Philomena on Aug 22 2012 12:53 PM

 Acai Berries Extend Fruit Flies
Acai berries lengthen the lives of fruit flies, say Emory University School of Medicine researchers. Acai could also counteract the neurotoxic effects of the herbicide paraquat on the flies.
Alysia Vrailas-Mortimer, lead author of the study, said she didn't start out focusing on acai. But acai worked better than several other antioxidant products such as vitamins, coenzyme Q10 and lutein.

"One thing that makes our work distinctive is that we tried commercially available supplements," she said.

"We went to a health food store and filled up a basket," Vrailas-Mortimer said.

She said she began the project with the help of undergraduate student Rosy Gomez, and narrowed her focus after initial success with acai.

Vrailas-Mortimer took advantage of a discovery she had made working with Subhabrata Sanyal, assistant professor of cell biology, PhD.

They had previously found that flies with mutations in the "p38 MAP kinase" gene have shorter lives and are more sensitive to heat, food deprivation and oxidative stress.

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P38 mutant flies lived an average of only eight days when they were given a simple sugar water diet. However, their lifespans tripled when their diet was supplemented with acai. Ginger was used as a control for the diet supplements.

Acai also protected normal flies against oxidative stress, in the form of hydrogen peroxide or paraquat.

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Acai can protect against oxidative stress when flies are exposed to hydrogen peroxide before being given acai, but the protective effect does not hold up if the order is reversed.

Paraquat is an herbicide that has neurotoxic effects that resemble Parkinson's disease. Under the influence of paraquat, flies' sleep-wake cycles gradually become chaotic (see graph). Acai can also help soften the effects of paraquat on flies' circadian rhythms.

"I think this is important," Vrailas-Mortimer said.

"We show that whatever is in acai that is lengthening lifespan, it can also keep the flies functioning better for longer when faced with paraquat exposure. It is maintaining quality of life rather than just preventing them from dying," she said.

When flies were fed a more enriched diet of a standard cornmeal/molasses mush, the effects of supplementation with acai were more pronounced in males than in females.

Males' lifespans were almost doubled with acai (20 to 40 days) but the effects on females were not as strong (30 to 34 days). On an enriched diet, male flies were more sensitive to paraquat than females as well.

Acai berries contain a variety of antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds, such as anthocyanins.

The study has been published by the journal Experimental Gerontology.

Source-ANI


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