I’m posting this because I’ve seen a number of reports of poor results from continuous use of C60, and continuous use is likely a bad idea.
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While C60/EVOO is certainly an anti-oxidant, there is also a spectrum of effects that appear to be persistent if not permanent. One possible explanation is that C60 is modifying the epigenetics of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), as epigenetic changes produce very long lasting effects.
Some background:
The epigenetic content of mtDNA is due to methyl groups that attach to DNA and act as off switches. These are copied after DNA replication to the daughter strand by an enzyme known as methyltransferase, which must contact both strands to copy the switch positions. It is believed from a theoretical study that C60 is attracted to the DNA groove between strands. There it may act as a physical barrier--a methyltransferase inhibitor like procaine*, which is also attracted to the DNA groove and has been shown to extend the lifespan of rats.
The theory:
If the methylation of mtDNA is randomly reduced (and thus has fewer genes turned off) in some fraction of mitochondria this will prove to be advantageous and the population of a cell’s mitochondria (of which there are typically hundreds or thousands) will in time become dominated by the better functioning mitochondria as they are constantly dividing and the defective ones removed by mitophagy. Thus it would be important to take regular breaks from C60 treatment to allow the population of better functioning mitochondria** to increase without further modification--a dosing schedule the Baati rat study may have stumbled upon by accident.
The bottom line:
This process of replication and mitophagy is selection of the fittest at the intracellular level. Taking C60 continuously may result in degrading the better functioning mitochondria as it doesn't allow time for the replication and selection process to work.
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*Procaine is sold for longevity as "Gerovital". In 1965 researcher Anna Aslan reported that it increased the lifespan of Wistar rats (males only) by 20%. The dosing schedule was intermittent with injections of procaine 3 times a week for 4 weeks, followed by 4 weeks off. According to one paper: "Procaine can also demethylate densely hypermethylated CpG islands, such as those located in the promoter region of the RAR beta 2 gene, restoring gene expression of epigenetically silenced genes. This property may be explained by our finding that procaine binds to CpG-enriched DNA."
** There is also a process of mitochondrial sex involving fusion and fission whereby the double-stranded loops of mtDNA (of which there may be ten or so per mitochondrion) are randomly exchanged so that after fission one daughter mitochondrion might contain a preponderance of defective strands and thus is recycled by mitophagy.