To illustrate my point,
The terminal half life of THC in the blood varies from 4.3 to 12.6 days
http://www.ncbi.nlm..../pubmed/2558889
Yet, THC and metabolites of THC and other cannabinoids are stored in adipose (fat) cells and can remain in the body for months or longer, until that fat is metabolized.
Exactly. C60 might stay in the body for a long time, but it's only going to be useful in the mitochondria--presumably--and that will be for a much shorter time. How long that is isn't nailed down. In fact, different fullerenes with different adducts go to different places in the cell for varying amounts of time, and we don't even know what the adducts are when C60 is dissolved in EVOO.
I found a few citations after you posted this -- that I find quite interesting
Rat mitochondrial turnover:
"We estimated the actual liver mitochondrial half life as only 1.83 days, and this decreased to 1.16 days following 3 months of dietary restriction, supporting the hypothesis that this intervention might promote mitochondrial turnover as a part of its beneficial effects."
http://www.ncbi.nlm....les/PMC2659384/
HeLa Cancer Cells (essentially no Hayflick Limit)
"All mitochondrial RNA species analyzed were found to be metabolically unstable, with half-lives of 2.5 to 3.5 h for the two ribosomal RNA components and between 25 and 90 min for the various putative messenger RNAs. "
http://www.ncbi.nlm....cles/PMC369693/
Now I don't know what the correlation of mtRNA turnover to actual mitochondrial turnover is -- but it seems the higher the rate of turnover the better for cellular longevity
Previous posts on Longecity have cited that C60OO induces mitophagy -- which current thought indicates would increase turnover
Perhaps there is a dose threshold to reach higher mitochondrial turnover
Edited by sensei, 08 December 2014 - 02:32 AM.