Kind: captions Language: en the question I ask everybody is if you got the exact same genes I mean there's small uh variations from mutation and so forth but effectively to same genes why do you look different well it turns out it's not your genes it's which of those genes are on and which of those genes are off and it's not only All the Rage it's also all the excitement of this idea can you reverse your epigenome to a younger State Peter D mandis welcome back to the show Tom it is a pleasure it's been way too long my friend it has been Co really messed up my rhythms and all of that and then I am super excited that you've published a new book which we're going to be talking all about but I want to know so when you and I first met it was really all about space yes and exponential Technologies and now we've really shifted into regenerative medicine he healthtech biotech regenerative uh longevity age reversal whatever terms you want um yeah I age reversal personally yes I and we'll talk about that yeah and I've become obsessed with David Sinclair who you guys talk about in the book I have found fundamentally as I've gotten older that my mindset and what I focus on has changed in ways that I wouldn't have predicted so until I was probably 44 45 I was I just thought about living forever all my plans were about living forever and it really didn't sink in the usefulness of thinking about the fact that I am going to die and then at about 45 it switched for me and it started to feel more useful to think about the fact that we might not hit escape velocity in my lifetime oh we're going to hit it baby and and then I had a year where it was like I I don't think it will happen for me and then I read David Sinclair's book yes and I thought this might actually happen yeah and that was the first time in a while where I thought maybe I was pessimistic for a minute why are you so optimistic is it regenerative medicine like what is it that really clicked for you my early life my first 40 years of life I'm 60 now my early conations you look amazing thank you I feel amazing I feel like you know 20 I have an internal mental age of 28 and I've got a you know a biological age of 49 and a half so we we can talk about that um my first 40 years were space no question about it it was like Star Trek and Apollo we're going there then I met Ray Kur uh read his book The Singularity is near we started Singularity University together and I became enamored with exponential Technologies computation sensors networks AI robotics 3D printing synthetic biology arvr blockchain all those Technologies being the tools to solve the world's biggest problems right and so that merged well with the work I do at X prise and it was about 8 years ago and this was around the time that you and I were were uh really becoming friends and connecting that I became enamored with the idea of longevity I'd always been interested in longevity when I was in medical school I remember watching a TV show on Long lived sea life that certain species of whales like the boohead whale could live for 200 years and the Greenland shark could make it to 4 or 500 years and I'm like thinking there's a jellyfish that's based basically Immortal Immortal yes yeah and you know and sea turtles you know are thought to be hundreds of years and I'm I'm thinking if they can do it why can't we right I mean seriously that's so you though like the the that's one of the things that I love about you is that you just refuse to accept things as they are it's like no I can make this better yeah well I was thinking at that moment that it's either a hardware problem or a software problem and that we're going to get the tools to fix that and we are with happening right now will you define that for me at the cellular level so in my head I was trying to figure out which you consider hardware and which you consider so I consider the software The genome and the epigenome um so our DNA your your the DNA and The Meta structures around the DNA we'll talk about the epigenome and the uh Hardware I consider the you know cellular organel and uh the structures of the cell um and they they sort of have a blurry definition between them uh but at the end of the day uh the tech it's it's really the fact that biology has become a a digital Tech as well right we've digitized biology we've turned into ones and zeros we are sequencing so when the NIH first sequenced the human genome we have 3.2 billion letters in our genome 3.2 from our mom 3.2 from our dad and uh the Human Genome Project cost about3 billion and took a decade to get a sequence uh Craig Venter uh did it in about um N9 months with $100 million so crazy and since then we've seen this precipitous drop I mean we're talking five times faster than Mo's law the speed at which computers are getting better right five times faster and we're down now to you can sequence a genome uh in about 7 hours right and costs are below a th there's you know question of whether and the and the prediction from alumina the the major sequencing company out there is that will get down to an hour and 100 bucks right so I mean it's the point where enter the hospital and your sequence like it's like check your BP sequence you you know see what's going on it it is so how targeted are things getting now in terms of taking that sequencing actually knowing something from it and targeting the whether it's still early days still early days uh where it's having an impact is in cancer uh therapies so being able to to sequence the cancer uh that someone biopsies and saying okay this cancer is going to be uh only radiation uh uh you know affected by radiation therapy this one can take a a chemotherapy or more importantly we're going to create a specific Gene therapy or crisper therapy or vaccine therapy against that cancer is anybody running AI against the so when you have the simple mutations where it's like this disease is related to this Gene and that's it there's no complex interactions but as as we go beyond those things and get into the more complex things is anybody running AI to start assessing it's actually these 72 different Gene interactions that cause whatever that's the dream that is the dream and doing that yet well it's being done um you know human longevity when it was uh Bob hurry Craig Venter and I put that company together and you you know that um the vision was large scale genome sequencing and at the same time large scale phenotype assessment you know full body MRI all of that information and then sorry so that people that don't know phenotype phenotype is the way that your genes Express so I look at you and what but I see that's your phenotype pH you're trying to get a correlation you're trying to get a correlation between everyone with these active these genes um and this environmental uh impact ended up with this kind of a cancer or everyone more importantly who had these genes um eating this kind of diet uh lived longer or you know so there how how do your genes impact uh your workout your diet all of those things and what we're learning is that genes are not your destiny right it's very important to know and you know this from your own personal work um in in weight loss and diet and mindset um it's your obsession uh that you can your epigenome we'll get into that uh Epi from the Greek word above your epigenome is uh which genes are on and which genes are off you can think about your 3.2 billion genes or 3.2 billion uh you know nucleotides letters in your your DNA alphabet uh which is tens of thousands of genes as those genes are sort of the the keys on a piano I was going to ask you so and maybe and the piano player is your epig genome okay so let me just push on that for a minute I have my DNA it's got these four letters they repeat over and over and over and over and over those groupings of letters which are revealed through methylation which we'll get into in a minute but what what is revealed in my very complexly wrapped DNA yes will determine what that cell becomes because my DNA strand contains all the genes all of the genes together um well so all of the genes have to be broken up into in this place play this note to go with your piano analogy but over here so in the eye play the eye notes in the knee play the knee notes in the brain play the brain notes yes and so you've got this long ass string of DNA CU it for most people I'll assume because it for me this is how it is that you get the concept of DNA you get the concept of genes you don't really know how they relate so let me let me break it down your 3.2 billion letters are broken up into 23 chromosomes and we sort of remember that from our high school biology right and those chromosomes are uh super tightly wrapped in compact right if you stretched out the DNA from a chromosome it would be meters long but it it's raveled together and if it when it's so Compact and raveled in the structure and using these proteins called histones um the DNA becomes very difficult to read now what do you mean read the DNA so the DNA a gene has a start and an end and typic TYC Al it is red um with a uh transcription uh process that turns from your DNA to a messenger RNA and from a messenger RNA to a protein a protein can be an enzyme it can be actin amiin from muscle it can be all kinds of things proteins are sort of the structural building blocks they're the major operating uh carrier of operations in the body and so if your DNA is so tightly wound that you can't actually read it then it's inert um and so the DNA needs to be opened up in certain points to be read to have an appropriate translation into proteins and in the beginning um when life begins we have a a plur potent stem cell so a stem cell and plur poent means it can become anything that stem cell can become uh heart liver lung kidney skin brain whatever it might be uh cell and it's super specialized um and it's super specialized because like you said the part of the DNA that codes for keratin or whatever the right protein is in in hair and skin uh is revealed but the other parts that might make a nerve cell are are bound up and hidden so that process of uh of which genes are turned on and which genes are turned off is called the epigenome now it gets interesting to our age reversal conversation which I I think will will sort of dominate our conversation here uh is if I said to you Tom you've got the exact same genes at Birth at 20 at 40 at you know when you're 80 so why do you look different why don't you have like you know you probably do have a ripped sixpack but what why why don't you look like you were look like when you were 20 um thank God thank God in your case my body better face maybe not so much but yeah so the question I ask everybody is if you got the exact same genes I mean there's small uh variations from mutation and so forth but effectively to same genes why do you look different why don't you look like a baby or like an 80-year-old man well it turns out it's not your genes it's which of those genes are on and which of those genes are off and that's called your epig genome and it's not only All the Rage it's also all the excitement of this idea can you reverse your epigenome to a younger State this episode is sponsored by Future go to Tri future. cimpact to get your first month for only $19 you can also click the link at the top of the episode description now enjoy the episode so the question is and this is what I found really interesting about David Sinclair and his work is an amazing book called lifespan and I commend it to everybody it's absolutely phenomenal your book life force and lifespan go together extraordinar beautiful onew punch for real um and what's interesting is I never really understood what was causing Aging in the first place and so walk us through the what methylation should do and then his idea what does he call it d differentiation X differentiation X differentiation I think where basically a cell should be an ey cell and it starts to break down and maybe it's revealing a little bit of like here's some of the skin cell here's a nerve cell like a fragment of it and so the the and and helping people understand what's happening in the cell that there are actually little things proteins moving around like reading this stuff the cell when you look into the cell it is insane the level of complexity within complexity within complexity it's Mor literally morac ulous that we are alive and what is going on you know we have 40 trillion cells in our body right 40 trillion cells and each of them is a living organism and we don't think about the fact that we're this massive collection of cells collaborating to have this conversation and then within our body we get into it but are all of the bacteria and vir and all of that which outstrip the number of human cells in us okay back to the original point so you're born uh uh you're in the womb your placenta uh is actually the organ that generates all the stem cells uh that manufacture the baby I think of the placenta is a 3D printer that manufactures the manufactures the baby and you're born and um you your body goes through a pre-programmed uh process that uh allows you to mature into adulthood now uh there's a series of seven genes um called the ceran genes and these genes are producing these ceran proteins and these are the Lynch pin uh of Aging it's the work that David Sinclair and George Church have done so beautifully and it turns out that your ceran genes and proteins have um a dual function that are critical for your uh for your life and they're competing functions so let me take this uh a step at a time so your ceran genes one function is they're in control of your epigenome they're controlling which genes are on and which genes are off and we'll get to methylation a little bit but but that's a really important function for them is keeping uh your genes your ey genes and ey Gene your skin genes a skin Gene and so forth so the epigenome is controlled and they do that by detecting damage in the DNA and rep well so that's the second function no they're they're doing this by controlling certain methylation proteins and and which hide or reveal which hi to reveal so the ceran genes are uh have a function of of controlling the epigenome to make sure that the right genes are are being ex opened uh to be red and the right jeans are being closed and what process do they use for that in this first part it is controlling the methylation of the DNA okay so the DNA let's go there the DNA um uh is methylated at different locations a methyl group is a is a carbon with three hydrogens and when you methylate it uh it hides the ability for that piece of DNA to be red it it will stop it from from being red and when you demethylate it it can open it up and there are methylation uh transcription factors that the ceran genes are impacting here um so if they're doing their job they're controlling the epigenome appropriately in that cell but the ceran genes have a competive itive job which is they're in charge of DNA repair at the same time and so as we are experiencing life I wouldn't say aging but experiencing life we are constantly being hit by cosmic rays uh especially when we're flying at 48,000 ft in the upper atmosphere uh secondhand smoke uh other chemical mutant uh uh mut gens and so we're accumulating uh DNA damage in our cells and the number I heard was like it's between a th to a million um mutations a day per cell I mean it's a lot so there's a lot of work per cell per cell Jesus it's crazy okay um but what does that damage look like G gets knocked off in a search so it's a few things it can be a single strand break it can be a double strand break it can be a um uh and so it's breaking of the DNA and that is happening from uh from oxidation it's happening from you know uh free electrons if you would hitting the DNA and it's it's nicking the the DNA and then what happens is you've got all you have incredible repair mechanisms that are there and uh if you have a double strand break right DNA is double stranded if it breaks uh you've got a one system that will fix double strand brakes um and you have another system that will fix a single strand break and there's a number of different repair systems there which frankly I have forgotten since medical school but just amazing what what able to do and sometimes when they make the repair they instead of a uh a g they'll put a t and that's when you have a a permanent mutation that can lead to a cancer now there because that's effectively created a new Gene at that point it's modified a gene okay and that that you have four letters H TC and G and those letters in groups of three code for an amino acid as part of a protein and um long story short the cerin are helping you maintain your genes in proper working order it's helping you repair your genes now here's the challenge cerin are powered by uh NAD plus nicotinamide Adine D dinucleotide NAD uh and NAD is sort of the energy currency in your cells uh how does that relate to uh ATP so it is ATP and NAD are in the same in the same cycle okay right and they're uh you're using ATP to activate your NAD um NAD Powers a cerin the challenge is that your NAD levels inside your cells drop precipitously after 40 interesting right more than half so you're you're slowing your ability to repair I want you to let's use the piano player analogy um uh the genes that you're playing uh as the epigenome you're playing the proper piano at the same time as a ceran you're over here fixing something so you're going from playing the piano to fixing something and playing the piano to fixing something and you need food to keep yourself going but all of a sudden you're spending more and more time fixing something because the DNA damage is accumulating and the amount of food you have or in my case coffee to to drink is reducing and so I'm gotten less energy and I'm being distracted and having to fix the DNA and I'm losing control of playing the piano right so all of a sudden your epigenome is becoming confused uh your Skin's skin is not making the right proteins to keep it elastic and and smooth and it's it's falling apart and so that from David Sinclair's book and we talk we have an entire chapter on David in fact one of the things we do is we uh Tony and I in the book uh have a number of Heroes that we go deep into and David who's a professor of genomics at uh at Harvard Medical School he's brilliant he's one of the top brilliant thinkers long story short that's what's going on this competition between repairing DNA and controlling your Pome and having your NAD levels fall over time uh is what's driving us to look older at age 80 or 90 or 100 are you supplementing N I am I'm not so uh that's one of the one of the elements so it turns out that um you want you want to boost your NAD levels in your cell and there are you know people go and get uh NAD uh IVs the problem is uh at least according to David and a few other uh uh scientists who I who I believe their their work and there's not a carrier to take the NAD from in the bloodstream into the cells and so what you want to do is supplement it and there are two precursors to NAD one is nmn and the other one is NR um and those we can transport into c those can get into the cell and in higher levels in the cell they drive higher levels of NAD so I take a gram of NAD of nmn every morning um and then I take uh uh another supplement basis that has nicotinamide Rob aide NR in it and between those two uh for me it's working to maintain now do I know that they're increasing or is it this on faith it's on on faith we're you know I hope that the ability to measure it intracellularly will become easier because it's not easy today but theoretically it should be supporting it and I feel great and I've got more energy than I've ever had um and there's a few other supplements in the book we talk about something called mibb 626 which is an nmn analog that is in Trials right now and it's going to go through not so nmn and NR are supplements you can buy them on the web there's 100 different versions The Challenge is that a lot of them uh are not in a crystallized form and they break down easily in any kind of heat on shipping they may last 30 days and so just you know please uh look into it we write about it uh in in life force about uh that that fact that they're not all the same do you guys have a resource on Fountain life to so if you go to life force.com there are two uh you can order the book there but then there are a number of resources there one is for Fountain life the other one is for uh my uh my life force where there are uh a number of recommended supplements that you can get access to there but that's not that's not the purpose here when I really get into the book's mission is to give people hope hope and to give people a game plan of what they can do MIB 626 comes out of a a company called edenrock uh the founder of Eden Rock Ed shulock attended one of my Su executive programs 10 years ago after selling his you know exiting with tens of millions from one of his companies and got so enamored with biotech that he's built this multi-billion dollar biotech company that is extraordinary and one of the things working with David Sinclair is they've created a a uh nmn uh analog molecule that they're taking through FDA approval right now and it's been secret for a while it was just revealed that the special forces have been doing a trial with them using the special uh molecule MIB 626 to increase uh the special for's ability for energy and work working out in long duration and to increase cognitive capabilities and so you know I can't say too much more but there's the potential of SWAT would break in and yeah there's a potential for having uh truly pharmacological agents that are available to us that increase our ability to have muscle and strength and cognition say it for me one more time MIB 626 does EX exactly what so right now from there was an article written it was leaked out of uh US Special Forces that they're using it to increase uh uh endurance and strength and is it playing on the NAD pathway it it's it is it is supplementing uh more effectively NAD in the cells interesting and also is this out like are you supplementing it's not available yet no it's in it's in very strict trials instead of going a supplement route they're going an FDA trial route which will enable them to make specific claims because they'll have the data and uh you know hopefully in two years three at the outmost it will become something that your physician can uh can order for you I love the uh story that that Ed shulock told me about one of his friends who was a world champion chess player in his 50s and early' 60s he now he's in the 70s but he's supplementing with this molecule and he's now back up to World Championship chess playing so I mean we all want to live into our 80s 90s hundreds the question is you don't want to be drooling in a wheelchair yeah I mean cognitive function is one of the most important things the the supplement that the Chess Master is taking is that uh the MIB 626 yes that's the one and I I'm I'm excited to get my hands on it as soon as I can but I kiding but does that so if if I'm understanding what you're saying correctly about the n ad pathway and I'm basically giving the energy to the cumans that they're going to need to both play and repair so that'll make sense but if if taking that is improving my cognition is is it that the cells are actually being repaired better I don't know other than to say your brain is one of you know is is using 30% of your body's energy output at any one time it's disproportionate right thinking is so you might just be feeding it better maybe yeah and of course the brain is is interesting yeah it is it is fascinating um you keep giving me the chills like this is so this is why I'm so excited about it right so i' I've switched my Venture fund bold Capital to instead of all exponentials were like 70% into biotech and health it's like the biggest business out there I've started four companies in the last couple of years in the biotech healthtech longevity space I just think there's no bigger Market it's like for me I want to make as much Capital as I can in that space and then I'll go back to the space space right yeah God this is so intriguing so the more I have forced myself to understand the mechanisms that are happening yes the one more intrigued I have become but two it's really beginning to influence the things that I'm doing so uh I'd love to talk to you about diet and it's funny how slow I am to actually change my diet but that I start talking about it long before I do um so I have historically been way heavy on meat and it makes me feel so good I just could not wrap my head around when I have tried a heavier plant-based diet I haven't felt as good as I do with meat then exploring the ideas that you guys talk about very eloquently in the book and beginning to understand that okay if red meat is triggering mtor and mtor is triggering growth and growth is giving my body the signal everything's abundant all is well um but the very thing that makes you live a long time is sending the body the signal yoyo things may not be like going as well in the environment as we think you better like you know kind of constrict a little bit hibernation right exactly which is why um caloric restriction is the only thing they've seen work across every species they've ever tried it on in terms of longevity and when I heard that I was like oh man so that would explain why I feel good I you know I can add muscle mass I feel phenomenal but I'm not giving my body the signal for longevity walk me through like so we're going to talk about uh four things that I or five things that I think are important for longevity that are the basics and we can start with diet first you talk about sleep you need to talk about exercise you need talk about mindset and then the the fifth one for me is uh daily annual uploads it's not dying from something stupid and and uh it's really really important to talk about the diagnostic side of the equation not every diet is right for every person your diet is really impacted by your genetics and also by your gut Flora um and just to be clear if you had to guess and I know this is a guess but if you had to guess is it weighted more towards your microbiome or weighted more towards your genetics I I am actually going to guess it's more towards your microbiome yeah that's my gut instinct as well okay uh so the there's certain things that are true and you know the single most fundamental part of your diet is sugar is poison right sugar is causes neuroinflammation absolutely clear it causes uh uh cardiac disease absolutely clear right sugar feeds cancers um and so getting rid of sugar is is the most important move anybody can make and do you consider that just like actual refined sugar as an ingredient or are you looking at carbohydrates well I'm also talking about you know uh low uh high glycemic index carbs as well stuff that becomes sugar in your bloodstream bread pasta white rice yeah so um I am where do you fall on fruit I eat a lot of blackberries and blueberries because they've got additional benefits right I sort of stay away from melons and orange juice and and things that become instantly become sugar in your bloodstream I I've gone hardcore vegan and then I've gone hardcore keto and I've gone back to a Mediterranean so I will typically eat as much veggies as I can I mean I'm pounding salads uh Peppers uh you know just as much greens as I can and I love a great Greek salad tons of olive oil right you put cheese on it I put feted cheese on it I do I enjoy it's the only cheese I actually eat is fety chees because it's a harder cheese because um I'm lactose intolerant thank God uh and that God interesting because I think um I think cow milk today is detrimental there's a number of studies that show that cow milk is uh in particular the type of cow milk that's dominant in the US is is not good for you and I don't have enough uh science on the tip of my tongue to back that up but go and and Google and take a look around I will supplement that with typically fish uh salmon when I can uh do I love a piece of bacon now and then 100% it's you know it's breakfast candy uh but I try and minimize I don't eat any red meat I don't uh uh or you know any uh any beef uh I'll eat some chicken uh some and some fish fish and but it's 80 90% uh diving into veggies um and that works for me it doesn't work for everybody and is any of that so obviously some of it's just experimental you've tried it is any of that driven by this idea of mtor and not wanting to trigger that pathway so what's Driven there is uh my intermittent fasting so I will uh get up I will not eat lunch until about 2:00 and then I will have a late lunch and an early dinner um and try not to overeat and I'll hope to be done by dinner by 7:00 and then I will Fast till the next day at 2:00 David Sinclair does one meal a day at dinner and then he's he's fasting and so I'm carrying with me you know this is my uh what on Earth is that it's athletic Greens in Fiji Water right so this will be what I drink so do you think that you're not getting enough uh of I assume you do the athletic greens for the micronutrients are you worried you're not getting enough in all the salads that you're pounding no um I this adds probably certain ones that I'm not getting but it also makes it uh more enjoyable to drink than just plain water it does get a bit boring I will give you that where's your what's your take on uh carbonated water interesting right so I've been all over the place I I enjoy carbonated water and the question is is it acidifying your your bloodstream or not so I just listen if if I were someday to get cancer I'd be going all alkaline I'd be zero sugar you know it's just like I'm going to fight it on every front until then I will uh I'm probably 80% flat and 20% carbonated at dinner it's like a bottle of of pel of uh what you call it um yeah pelo pelo yeah exactly very interesting so I don't know what it is I whatever is best for me I'm always like to the right of that so I drink uh basically every ounce of water that I intake is carbonated y so I don't drink sodas or anything like that sodas again phosphoric acid and sugar you know just say no so going back to red meat for a second so do you avoid red meat because of the um the correlative studies on um increased cancer inflamation yes and i' I've just I've learned to just not like it as well after a time it just is you know it's not what I'm going to eat you know if I if I'm going to eat anything other than uh fish a little bit of chicken and a little bit of pork but that's my personal you know and again it's really maximizing the amount of uh of greens of uh colorful greens you know uh broccoli uh with olive oil and lemon is awesome you know who would have thought I love brussels sprouts do brussels sprouts are delicious I'm not sure if they're cooked well I'm not sure what people's beef are but I will say that I like brussels sprouts with bacon I do love brussels sprouts with bacon so good uh yeah I I am surprised when you get something cooked well just how delicious um vegetar items can be vegan items can be and and I I will set aside all the stuff that just you know puts a ton of sugar in it have you heard of Shu I have not so rich roll who I think you know I'm going to see later today amazing guy phenomenal podcast his wife created this vegan cheese which after the whole so my thing I am still eating a ton of red meat I want everybody to be very clear but I am going through this intellectual exercise of exploring this of mtor and like if if red meat is triggering that and you need to put your body in a totally different state in order to um get the longevity so I'm like okay well are there vegan things that I can try so rich ends up sending me some of his wife's cheese it is so good I I literally freaked out I was texting him like homie this is freakish and so uh yeah I'm always a little tense when something's highly processed but nonetheless this stuff is amazing the ingredient list is when I see him I'm going to ask them for something dude it's so good you are going to love it I I literally can't believe how delicious they've made this stuff and that's where I'm like okay like if if there are things that I can do that are really delicious and I can measure and this is where this gets interesting I can measure its effect on whether it's my telr or I forget what the inside tracker what's it called inside tracker is one yes what is it they're looking for in that is it methylation so they're they have uh an epigenetic clock that because when you say that you're you're 49 biologically so it turns out that going back to our epigenome and the methylation sequence um uh there is a methylation pattern that changes over time and you can measure it and uh there is a uh a number of Meth a clocks and so inside tracker uses one uh Fountain life I think uses the same one and and so I give some blood and they do not the DNA sequence but they look at the methylation and they say you have the methylation pattern of a 49-year-old even though you're 60 and so David Sinclair who when the time we wrote the book was 53 and had a methylation pattern of someone who was 33 wa right and so that's that's my goal 20 years it's amazing um and so do you do things and then do the tracker and look at it and go okay cool I am constantly varying my supplements my exercise my diet uh in directions that are pro- AG reversal and let's let's talk about some of the other ones so on the diet side just to summarize you know the recommendation is intermittent fasting you know at minimum you know eat an early dinner you're like 19 hours I'm yeah I'm roughly 700 p.m. till uh till 1 so yeah that's uh what is that 6 m is 24 18 hours right on the extreme I'll do 1 meal a day but typically it's 8 you know 6 on 18 off uh the second thing uh is I'll try and you know bring in at least 2 liters of water a day all right if on a great day I can do three just pounding water we are constantly dehydrated we don't drink enough water I want to ask about that and I don't I we have more so let's put a pin and not lose where we were but every time somebody says to drink that much water there is a skeptical part of my brain that's just like from an evolutionary standpoint there is no way we had access to that that is a really great Point um so uh in the book we provide some of the studies in the background on on water intake I'm taking this on gospel truth I don't have the science behind it um putting that aside minimizing sugar that's clear plant-based diet maximizing my plants intake and then adding supplementing it with you know I do eat eggs I do eat fish and so that's more of a Mediterranean diet which is you know genetically and you know historically my background let's go to the next subject sleep uh evolutionarily if our species could have evolved to sleep less it would have been such a boom to get extra hours in the day for finding food protecting yourself mating that we would have slept less but the fact that we T that we need 8 hours of sleep uh is a fundamental fact your brain needs it and I remember when I was in medical school I used to pride myself on like I can get by with 5 hours 5 and a half and that was a stable point for me and now I pride myself on getting 8 hours I got my aura ring I set the temperature in the room to 65° I have a cooling blanket I've got these great Manta eye shades that are so comfortable I um you know and I go to sleep I try and be asleep by 9:30 so I can get up at 5:30 and I'm like did I make 8 hours it's like I'm I'm trying to I'm trying to hit that and I think that's really important have you set a goal to work out more but don't know which exercises to start with future is here to help future is a new fitness app that connects you with an online personal trainer who will send you workouts each week monitor your performance and message you to keep you motivated if you don't already have one future will send you an Apple Watch to borrow for the duration of your membership which is amazing and your trainer will use that to monitor your progress tracking your heart rate and activity data while you work out your phone your watch and your trainer all work seamlessly together so if you want a workout plan that's built for you not the masses that will keep you focused and motivated then go to tr future. cimpact to try your first month for just $19 that's cheaper than most gym memberships once again go to tr future. cimpact to try your first month for just $1 you can also click the link at the top of the episode description all right guys take care and be legendary how about you how you doing on sleep dude I'm freakish about sleep so I one thing that I will say I'm very proud cuz I'm definitely a hustle porn guy like telling people go hard uh but I've always told people get sleep and that is a priority in my life so I'm in bed at 900 p.m. like it's a religion yes I don't set an alarm so I wake up when I wake up now I will say that there are times in my life where I am so intense on something that I end up not getting a ton of I just wake W up but I know that if I were to back off and do have less stress in my life that I would sleep more so even though I'm not waking up to an alarm I am doing things mentally that end up reducing my sleep so I'm not thrilled with that if you were to track right now my average per night is between six and six and a half okay I'm I'm hitting minimum of seven and I'm routinely hitting eight hours which I'm really happy about uh but it's really getting up and having the energy in in the morning right so do my best writing early same yeah it's like I used to be I remember medical school and graduate school I was uh you know I'd be pounding at 2: a.m. and and 3:00 a.m. and and like that was my and I my schedule was flipped where I mental Clarity first two hours of the day yeah so I don't know how much Credence to give to corono type but when I was young so that I went through a period where I was unemployed and in that period my my sleep time just kept getting pushed later and later and later and I realized I had a problem when I had to set an alarm to make a 10 p.m. movie and I was like whoa all right so and you just start to feel weird one you're not seeing the sun to you're not really seeing other people because you know when you go to the grocery store it's 1 in the morning and so there's two other people in the store and I was like something doesn't feel right here and so I forced myself to get back onto a normal schedule but um but now I'm like man when 8:00 comes around I'm like can I go to bed yet can I go to bed yet so it's not like somebody has to convince me to go to bed at 9:00 like I'm ready to go to bed and uh yeah that's I want to feel good in the morning I've got 10 and a half year old boys that are typically in bed at 7:30 and sleep by 8: and I'm like ready to go to sleep then too yep it's like I'm like oh God please go to sleep so I can go to sleep yeah um so uh sleep is critical uh 8 hours um let's go to exercise next right I mean it's still the fundamentals of diet sleep exercise uh for me I try and get in my 10,000 steps a day I'll take my meetings as many meetings as I can walking uh I'll take my phone calls walking I'll take my zoom calls on my phone walking just to get that in and then I do a heavyweight workout twice a week and lightweights uh you know every day how about you uh so I work out four to five days a week and I do basically exclusively lifting I won't call it heavy cuz I used to lift heavy and I definitely don't do that anymore but I lift things that I can do say five to six reps um unless I'm doing something for deadlifts deadlifts I do ultra High Reps so like 15 to 20 plus reps uh and I do that because I had I just kept injuring my my back and so don't want to play with that anymore but I find if I don't deadlift my back starts to hurt so I've kept it in there but I keep it ultra high rep now one thing you guys talk about in the book is and I'm forgetting the name but where you're not trying to move the weight you're actually trying to push against the almost immovable object yeah so that's a uh and there's uh Osteo strong is one of the companies that enables that but it's it's when you've got a uh a weight even in you know if you're in curls and you've exhausted your muscles and you can bring it up and just hold it until it it goes down it's that that point of Maximum contraction and maximum force and it's signaling the muscles at at that point you're just trying to Signal them uh I think the molecule is Denine monophosphate that that triggers muscle growth one of the things I think it's important for people to know is muscle mass is an indicator of longevity there is a direct correlation and uh there's a couple of reasons thought number one uh your muscles store blood and stem cells in them and the second is a lot of people die Post Falls you know uh you break your hip you break your pelvis is how my dad passed you know ends up in the hospital and then there's a pneumonia and I just hear this story over and over again I just you know got my mom a trainer God bless her she's 86 um and it's like I have the dedication in the book to her saying mom you're going to make it over 100 please and it's like get a trainer to keep her muscles uh toned as much as possible yeah yeah muscle is a a very big deal um how do you think about like when you're so I guess you intake some meat you intake eggs so not a big deal but that's one thing that I when I hear that I start sketching out but between okay wait I'm going to need to trigger mtor to build the muscle mass but mtor is also I won't see directly shortening I'm yeah I don't know enough to make the statement so people check me up on this but this is what I think that mtor is effectively shortening my life compared to what it could be if I wasn't constantly living in mtor so it's this weird balance of needing the muscle mass which my understanding of one of the reasons that muscle mass is so effective to your point is that it's a storage mechanism so it's storing uh you just talked about stem cells blood but also amino acids and so um oh God I'm forgetting his name but there's this guy back at Quest we used to talk to all the time very accomplished scientist and he was like you would see like a burn victim and if they had muscle and within like 3 weeks their muscle would just be gone because the body was just stripping it of the amino acid so it could repair and rebuild the skin and I was like whoo that is cuz I had never thought about that when you lift you realize you guys talk about this in the book that it does feel a little cusion and that if you stop working out you're going to lose that muscle mass distressingly quickly yeah and so my thing is okay hold on if if the body is like you're going to have to put me in like an adapter die state for me to put the muscle on and then if you stop putting me in that state I'm going to strip you of the muscle muscle's clearly very expensive the body is nervous in my work to hold on to muscle so the question becomes okay one why is it expensive and then two what is it if it's correlated with all cause mortality what is it doing that makes it valuable enough that you do want to keep some but that it does get thrashed here's here's the a couple of really important data points here so your body is constantly remodeling itself and you know this right bone and muscle remod model based upon your needs if you don't need it um you lose it and so if you're in bed rest bone density and and muscle uh disappears um and the challenge is that our bodies were never evolved to live past age 30 so if we go back sort of to evolutionary biology 100,000 years ago on the savanas of Africa you'd go into puberty at age 12 or 13 and before birth control you were pregnant and by the time you're now 27 28 years old your baby's having a baby and back then before McDonald's and whole food before you know we had abundant amount of food available 24/7 uh the last thing you wanted to do to perpetuate the species was steal food from your grandchildren's mouths and the best thing you could do was die right and give your bids back to the environment and not back your tribe and so the average human lifespan 100,000 years ago was you know 30ish and even 100 years ago was just 40 um not that you couldn't live longer but the average lifespan uh from childhood mortality and early deaths and everything was was 40 um and so genetically everything that would kill you after 30 after reproductive age was never selected against so all the stuff in your you know cardiac disease in your 50s and cancer in your 60s and 70s and uh Dementia in your 80s and 90s was never biologically selected against and even retaining muscle mass and bone mass was never advantageously selected again if we had if we could reproduce into our hundreds then the people who had the most muscle the the most you know cognition the the most the least disease their genes would perpetuate and that would be a positive feedback loop but that just hasn't been the case muscle is critically important uh I'll talk about one of my companies uh that just took public this year called vacinity um and it's a super cool company uh uh it is uh a company that creates what are called peptide vaccines right so a peptide is a small sequence of amino acids it's a piece of a protein and it's we do these specially designed uh vaccines I'm a co-founder and vice chairman of the company the the brilliant individuals are mayeh who who's the CEO and L Reese who's the executive chairman they've built this vaccine company it's got a covid-19 vaccine which we just got data uh yesterday we just announced today that uh it's three times more effective as a booster than the fiser vaccine W which I'm super excited about and what mechanism is it so pepti work so what we do is we create um a peptide sequence uh in the shape of part of the covid virus but it's not the you're not putting mRNA to create the spike that is then shed and then picked up we we generate um part of the shape of the spike and it's attached to a very we'll call it a very provocative uh protein that is um seen by the by the body is dangerous and those two combinations cause your immune system to form antibodies against the portion of the covid vaccine but it is uh super mellow there's very low reactogenicity uh to the vaccine so I'm hopeful it'll become sort of the safer booster vaccine and that's great but that's not what I'm talking about here we've been able to also create vaccines uh against Targets in the body uh against Alzheimer's against Parkinson's against uh hyperia which is stroke and uh heart disease and we're developing against bone loss and muscle loss how does that work like if people are so let's take Alzheimer's which I imagine is one of the harder ones what is it they're taret tting CU not still a big question mark so it's targeting uh the beta amalo which is buildup and so if you can Target that what happens is your body starts creating antibodies which goes attaches to the beta ameloid in these these uh short chain beta Amid and then extracts them out before they build up obviously I am not an expert on Alzheimer's but the idea of beta ameloid plaques being the ambulance at the uh scene of the accident rather than the if we end reming alloid plaqu and it's actually toap a virus or whatever um so so far we're we're entering phase three of the you know phase one is sa is safety and it's very safe how long have they been going down this road doesn't this take a long time seven years Jesus yeah seven years um phase two is efficacy and phase three is efficacy at scale m right so uh we've completed our phase two we're getting ready to enter a phase three uh we're entering Phase 2 on Parkinson's um we uh which is amazing it's um Al uh Alpha ccas is what the target is there so here's in uh in hyperemia I find it fascinating I have I have hyperia high LDL right it's genetic uh my dad had a lot of disease and atrial fibrillation do you take a Statin I do not take a Statin I hate statins super curious to hear more about that but finish okay so what I have been taking is a monoclonal antibod uh called ratha um that I inject 5 MLS every two weeks wow into my belly fat or my my my uh my thigh muscle and that monoclonal antibody so it's an antibody right that targets a protein in my liver called pcsk9 and that protein in my liver is what generates LDL the bad cholesterol and so this monoclonal antibody uh that's very expensive it's $14,000 a year who right not not cheap it's not it's not the first second or third line of defense it's like the last line of defense cuz people can't afford it and so the monoclonal antibody is manufactured in a vat in this in this uh uh regeneron manufacturing facility I get it I inject it goes to my liver and uh and blocks the pcsk9 protein the antibody attaches and blocks it from manufacturing LDL so what we're doing is we are manufacturing uh a vaccine that you give yourself every 6 months and the vaccine activates your own immune system to create that same antibody for free wow so your immune system creates this antibody against the pcsk9 goes to the liver and blocks it except instead of $144,000 a year the cost is maybe 100 bucks a year wow right and so now all of a sudden it can become a first line of defense and it attacks the root cause of the LDL production which is then so the idea is can you preventively give vaccinated everybody so you don't produce the heart disease or the stroke from that from that LDL and that it becomes exciting now how I got to the vaccin story was that we are also um in development of a vaccine against bone loss and muscle loss and so imagine imagine if when what are you targeting um I am I should it's in the book and I apologize from not remembering the exact uh targets but it's basically it's going to be blocking the osteoclasts which are the cells in the bone that break down the bone right so bone is dynamic it's built up by osteoblast and it's broken down by Osteo class and it's just the way the if you're a skier and you're stressing your bones osteoblasts are building up bones where that stress is if you're in bed rest for a month it's breaking it down and in in muscle um you're you know the sarcopenia which is the technical term for for for uh muscle loss uh you can block the muscle breakdown as well so imagine if you when you build your muscle up and you build your bone up that it it just stays at Mass um one of the things that's exciting uh I share with my my dear brother Lou ree who's executive chairman of this company is passionate about space so imagine being able to go and vaccinate the astronauts before they go to Mars or before they go to the moon so they don't have the muscle loss and the bone loss and they can retain it when they're coming back and of course the real business opportunity is in the Aging population where that's a real issue so it's just another powerful tool that we talk about in the book that vaccines are becoming extraordinary as a tool and and whether you hate a covid vaccine or love a covid vaccine it's a technology that has saved you know tens if not hundreds of millions of lives and so Stefan bansal who the CEO madna is uh is a friend and the work that they've done is unbelievable right we went from uh the Wuhan virus sequence sent by email to labs around the world from Wuhan uh to a madna vaccine designed in 24 hours whoa and then from that design to being put into production and approved for distribution in under a year now this is something normally takes 7 to 10 years to do we did it all in under a year and built the manufacturing at scale I mean that was shows us what's possible Right This is the exponential age that we're living in so where is madna going next they're producing vaccines against all the viruses we accumulate throughout life so we have cytomegalo virus herpes virus uh HIV viruses all kinds of things and it turns out that when you have these viruses in your bloodstream they your immune system is constantly battling to keep them in check and there's something called imuno depletion or imuno exhaustion which is if your immune system is being used to exhaust is being exhausted by constantly fighting these indog these viruses that are in your system never wiped out then your immune system is not there to fight cancer right and one of the things that people should know is we're always developing cancers the body is always developing cancers it's just that your immune system finds them and zaps them and so the idea of what madna is going to go next is to develop vaccines against all of these um that generate the antibodies that keep these in check versus your tea cells keeping them in check and it's an amazing vision of where they're going and so I just think we're going to start to see these brand new sets of tools remember I said we need to learn how to modify our software or hardware and this is modifying our our Hardware in this regard wow yeah it's really incredible what so regenerative medicine is a big part of the book and it's a big part of the focus that's something I'm super excited about where where is the state of it now and and maybe even so everyone will understand the words regenerative and medicine but what is regenerative medicine and what's the most exciting stuff happening yeah sure uh and there's a lot it's amazing insane so hold on this is where we have some fun so uh our B remember I said the placenta is a 3D printer the manufactures all the cells that create the fetus and the the newborn right it's a 3D printer that manufactures a baby and then as we grow in our body we have stem cells all over the place in stem cells in our bones in our brain in our muscles and they're there as the uh as the repairment um and you can think of the body there's a great analogy uh that uh that Bob hurry and arbert deg gray have have used of if your body is a beautiful mansion like this incredible place that we are right now and uh and you have the designs for the place and you have an army of of repair repair men and women who are fixing the place and uh anything goes wrong they fix it anything goes wrong they fix it but over time imagine that uh your repair staff are getting older and dying off and more scile and damage starts accumulating and that's effectively what's going on inside the body so one of the nine Hallmarks of Aging is is stem cell depletion so between uh you know a child at Birth and someone who is in their 60s 7s 80s '90s you can see hundredfold to a thousandfold less stem cells in your body and and so the repair mechanisms uh you know are super weakened uh regenerative medicine is how do you Revitalize your stem cell populations how do you you augment them so uh Bob herui who's also part of the book the book was principally written by by Tony myself and Bob help guide a lot of the the content as well uh he's my brother from another mother uh he a great dude yeah he's amazing uh so Bob was a trauma neurot trauma surgeon amazing and one day when his daughter was being born he realized that the placenta was great growing very large ahead of the fetus growing like the fetus was a bean and the planta was really fully formed and when he and I were in medical school it was always a placa was a support organism for the for the fetus but if that was the case why wasn't it growing at the same rate as as the embryo well it turns out it's not it's generating the the the stem cells and the cells that are manufacturing the uh the embryo and he's the first person to to realize how powerful the the placenta is as a source of uh of plur potent stem cells and uh and immunological cells so he built a company within cell Gene that's now part of Bristol Myers uh called uh so Cene was A1 billion dollar company he was in charge of cellular medicine about three years four years ago I helped him spin that out and we formed a new company called cellularity which also just went public this year it's it's the uh company that is mines the placenta so we we store hundreds of thousands of placentas I had my two boys 10 years ago were stored the company anybody who's listening if your kids are if you're if you're pregnant or you know someone who's pregnant it's uh life Bank USA instead of just storing the cord blood you can store the placental cells W and so it's like having the original boot disc to go back to early days at computers or the original computer code of your child stored eventually to be able to manufacture backup organs and manufacture whatever you might need for that child and so out of the placenta we extract stem cells we extract exosomes which exosomes are are the so stem cells are generating these growth factors and the growth factors are released by from the stem cells in these little uh vacul these little fat contained micr cells that have no DNA no organel it's just sort of a exide structure it's an a bilipid structure with these growth factor chemicals in them and those are called exosomes and so it's how they're excreted from stem cells and they're in the mure and you can extract them uh and and so you can so I when I go to Fountain life every time I get uh I get these exosomes injected into my bloodstream versus the stem cells and their growth factors going into my you have to find ones that are match no no really you don't have to worry about blood type nothing nothing the exosomes are just the growth factors and I'll talk about why even placental cells don't require matching um because they're they're immunoprivileged if you think about a surrogate mother who's carrying a baby that she's not genetically related to she doesn't reject the baby and the baby doesn't reject her and so there's an immunoprivileged structure there which is fascinating and very advantageous wow yeah it's before the cells are are given an identity of self by the thymus gland anyway long story short um the question has been can stem cells help you regenerate and repair this entire book got started when Tony was skiing down you know snorebucks he's going to his friends what do I do it's surge surgery surgery surgery and he called me up and I said to him to listen before you have surgery I think you should really go and try stem cells and he goes like what should I do and I said go talk to Bob uh Bob and I set him up at a at a clinic uh down in Panama he went down uh he had stem cell treatments in the joint and intravenously over the course of three days and as he explains it uh on the third day for the first time in in years he stands up and he's got no pain in his back and which was an unrelated injury unrelated and uh and his shoulder is uh beginning to feel better and months later on MRI it's completely healed without any any surgery now results will vary to be clear uh Tony is a is air is a miracle unto himself and I think his mind over matter is is extraordinary but he got religion uh I invited him to a conference uh uh an ex prize event we were having at the Vatican we were piggybacking on the uh cure conference that the pope hosts every every two years and uh he came and he got so excited about this and that's when this book was born and the book opens up with the story of the Vatican conference and um his injuries and such and regenerative medicine is the notion that we can use uh stem cells and exosomes and growth factors to help regenerate our body to help regenerate muscle brain all of the tissues of our body um a few other areas so uh you might have heard about the young blood uh experiments it's a fun uh Dracula myth here so years ago in fact Bob hurri did a of this early work and it was repeated in Amy wager lab in uh at Harvard if you take the circulatory system of a young Mouse in an old mouse and you combine them it's called parabiosis the old mouse gets younger and the young mouse gets older and it's like what what up you know why is this happening and so what Amy wager uh did was she identified a particular molecule that is decreasing as we age um and then it's called gdf1 and she started giving that to the old mice and they became younger W and so uh uh there is a company called olivian that's uh been designed to turn that into a a drug they're entering human trials just now finished with animal trials and it's being used in certain conditions um uh but you know you always and when you're doing an FDA trial you can't just say it's going to affect everything you have to pick a particular point and say we're going to look at uh uh neuroinflammation or cardiac conditions or whatever the case might be and we're going to measure this uh this disease and these molecule these uh you know markers and see if they get modified and so that's exciting um could that you know uh what have they decided to Target um uh they are deci they're targeting the cardiovascular system in particular uh and there's again uh we talk about Mark Allen who's a CEO of that company who's a friend uh full disclosure bold is an investor in in olivian uh as is Tony um and uh we'll see I'm excited about that I'm always look I think you know the biggest business opportunities on the planet are going to be age reversal and health Tech and biotech and so forth you you still can't take it with you right uh so there that's one area another area of regenerative medicine that is below your mind level stuff is building organs this is nuts we're heading towards a organ abundance so today there are hundreds of thousands of people on an organ donor list a lot for kidneys which is the number one needed and then heart and liver and lung you know I once wrote a screenplay about a guy whose wife is dying he has to go harvest the organs of bad guys uh to work her up the Unos list that's that's crazy um so right now if you need an organ transplant you're hoping that someone with an HLA match in other words a match to your surface antigens dies and is an organ donor right so I'm an organ donor I think that's the right thing to do I check that on the form uh encourage others to consider as well um I hope not to die anytime soon but just you know just putting that out there um and uh you're waiting for that and then the transplants uh if you're in good enough shape and the organ's good enough shape but we're we're transplanting a fraction of the list but imagine a future in which you have a backup set of organs on hold for you right like in the Deep freeze ready to go so there are two approaches going on right now one by an incredible entrepreneur Martin rothblat who you know Martin uh is uh is brilliant I've known her for 40 years uh Martine is on her seventh moonshot right now wow uh she used to be Martin uh and uh when when she was Martin she was the co-founder of XM radio and serus radio she was an uh an F uh an FCC regulatory lawyer and an aerospace engineer and amazing brilliant person not done much with her life yeah yeah and and uh she had uh a uh uh a sex change operation remain married to beina who's brilliant uh a number of kids one of her one of her kids one of Martin's change the name to Martin one of Martin's kids um by the name of Genesis uh when she when Martin was now still in XM radio and serious radio uh is discovered to have a fatal disease called pulmonary fibrosis and what does Martin do she quits her job she sells her shares and sets out to cure her daughter's disease damn with no background in biology starts with a high school Biology book and camps out the medical library and is reading every everything on pulmonary fibrosis and is tracking down and talking to the doctors and just you know monom maniacally like I love this Joseph Campbell quote like a a man whose hair is on fire seeks water right isn't that a great quote so good the chills again yeah and uh goes after that and tracks down a potential drug that could stay the course of pulmonary fibrosis for her daughter who's only got a couple years of life left and uh the drug company refuses to provide it to her and so uh Martin goes and grabs a whole bunch of great scientists and advisors and brings it into her orbit and they go and they Lobby and they finally get the uh the drug company to agree to give them access to that orphan drug which they had no intention to develop but didn't want the risk and what Martin gets is a little baggie of white powder whoa and she has to go from there to a manufacturable drug to uh trials and lo and behold it works and it saves her daughter's life Wow and in the course of that she builds a back then 6 billion company called United Therapeutics that she's the chairwoman and CEO now it doesn't stop there cuz Martine realizes that this drug will stay the course of pulmonary fibrosis but it doesn't cure pulmonary fibrosis and now the question is how do I manufacture lungs and so she sets out on three different approaches to manufacture replacement lungs and her primary one she hooks up uh with Craig Venter I'm very proud to have made that connection and the idea is can you take a pig that happens to have the same size heart kidney lungs as humans and can you modify the surface proteins of that pig to humanize it make it humanlike this is so crazy and then engineer out it's got endogenous retroviruses that if you put that pig organ into a human the retroviruses can pop out and infect the person so you to zap all the retroviruses modify 10 surface genes on that pig and it was done and how do they modify the genes crisper crisper this is insane insane totally insane and now what happens next uh they modified it uh about uh 6 months ago when we're getting ready to publish and doing last minute changes in the book Ask Martine so when is this likely to happen says well by the time your book is coming out it's going to be real right on Q uh they do a kidney transplant uh into as the first one into a man who was on life support but but uh their family allowed them to do this as a test and it went great uh and then just recently I think about two months ago they did a heart transplant into a a recipient who's doing well and so so hold on we we have taken Pig organs yes humanized them and for people that don't know what crisper cast 9 is you basically go in and edit the DNA yes insert something else like do you give it the bit of DNA to insert so yes you can do that or you can just uh you can just cut out a particular Gene and a piece that does something that works in pigs but does not work in humans and we cut that bit out and you can then put in the proper bit uh now I don't actually know what the exact modifications they made so I don't want to venture but we humanized it we humanized it was 10 genes that were modified in the Pig this is bananas it's bananas it gets even more bananas so that's the work that United Therapeutics is doing and you know uh if you sacrifice like 1% of the pigs that we eat every year there'd be enough organs for everybody on the planet right I mean it's crazy stuff uh the second thing is one of my favorite Heroes a guy named Dean Cayman right Dean Dean is brilliant um people know him for creating the segue which is the last thing on the list that he's done that's amazing uh he uh created the you know uh the implantable insulin pump he's created uh the Luke arm for people who have lost their arms he's created Luke arm the Luke arm um it's a robotic arm that allows you to you know basically I assume it's named after Luke Skywalker of course yeah love that uh yeah anyway uh but uh the slingshot machine that makes purified water from anything wet um including sewage I mean it's he's incredible right I won't go I won't go down that path uh three years ago he sets out on a journey um backed by the defense department to build a machine that in one end goes induced plur potent stem cells you take a skin cell you modify it you dedifferentiate it to a stem cell you put that in and then over the course of 1 to 3 months you manufacture an organ this is so like this is yeah like yeah and and guess what they've done it for bone ligament bone segments so if you need uh a knee operation or an ankle operation you take some skin cell you diff dedifferentiate it you put in the machine and you get out of it bone ligament bone with your genetic code in it where they're going next is going after pediatric Hearts wow and so their goal is by 2023 next 18 months you'll put a child's skin cell dedifferentiate to an induced PL poent stem cell and I think it's about a 3-month period of time your manufactured heart comes out for transplant it's insane so so that people understand how this is already happening now what have we done in animal models with hearts in particular because I know the punchline but for people that don't I think this will be it cuz hearing to oh in 18 months will be making human organs I'm like no way but if you hear some of the stuff that's already being done it starts to seem pretty real so so Tony atala's lab uh at Wake Forest Tony's been manufacturing stem cell derived uh simple organs for some time he's manufactured bladders uh the skin is an organ so full thickness skin with the epidermis and dermis for transplant like if you're a burn victim right being able to go from your skin stem cells and manufacture sheets of your skin that you could then transplant in uh they've manufactured uh micro beating Hearts uh you know few centimeters in size um uh one of the things uh uh there's a friend uh Deepak Shava who's the president of the Gladstone Institute up up in Northern California and the work that he's done again blows me away I call it cellular Alchemy your heart is made up of uh myocytes muscle cells beating cardiac myocytes that you know beat on a regular rhythm and connective tissue uh fibr blasts and when you have a heart attack uh the muscle tissue dies and the connective tissue replaces it but it's all of a sudden it's not beating and so your cardiac output can be significantly reduced and what Shava has done is uh been able to uh use gene therapy to convert those fibro blasts into myocytes so you turn the connective tissue into beating heart once again right because the genes are there they're just differentiated as connective tissue and not as heart muscle cells dude people are finding ways to tell a cell to be something different yes that's so like sci-fi it is I I love cellular Alchemy CU that's my favorite I I gave it that name cuz I love it CU it describes what we're talking about literally like the idea so Alchemy if anybody's not familiar the the pursuit of turning lead into gold right so taking one thing and making it another but at the cellular level because the cells contain the full DNA if you know the sequence of chemicals I'm not sure what the actual thing is but whatever that thing the the Alchemy part is it actually works like this is okay nuts I have to talk about one more thing before we're out of time uh which is the revolution in Diagnostics so I said uh for living as long as you can uh it's food exercise sleep mindset is so critically important I'll come to that next and then not dying for something stupid so it turns out most everyone out there is an optimist if you go up to someone in the street and say do you have cancer growing in you do you have an aneurysm do you have any problems that you should know about it's like pause no I feel great right and I don't want to go to the doctor because I don't want to know which is of course you want to know because you can do something about it so um one of the companies that we built uh uh Fountain life and there's a a sister company uh uh the health nucleus at human longevity down in San Diego Fountain life is in uh four cities and will be in a dozen cities in the next uh in the next 18 months um I just went there two days ago down in the facility Naples and I get uploaded every year and that upload involves about 5 hours of my time I go and I get a full body MRI uh brain MRI brain vasculature coronary MRI uh I then uh and it's looking for any sign of any cancer it's looking for a sign of any aneurysms or any aberration and then I did what's called an AI enabled clearly coronary CT long story what it's doing is it's a it's a CT of your heart um using artificial intelligence to analyze the blood vessels uh you probably heard about calcium scores right is your heart are your heart vessels calcified and you like oh my God you got a calcium score of a thousand that's terrible or calcium score of zero that's great calcification actually doesn't matter because if your if your plaque in your coronary artery is calcified if it's hard you're fine it's not going to rupture it's only if if it's uded that you're concerned what the clearly CT does is it looking for soft plaque that isn't calcified yet that could rupture and that's what really truly matters and so it's changed completely how we look at cardiac disease uh we do a dexa scan looking at muscle and bone uh we do your genome your gut microbiome uh all of your omix it's about 150 gigabytes of data wow and I go every year I feel naked until I go through it and then I you know if I'm going to find something it's okay I'm going to attack it and fix it so we're all optimists about our health and everyone knows about someone who went to the hospital and oh my God you've got stage three or stage four cancer it didn't happen that morning yeah right if you detect cancer at stage three or stage four your chance of a cure is like 10% if you detected at stage zero or stage one it's like 99% wow right so it's not it varies for different cancers but the idea is we're all developing cancers your immune system hopefully catches it but otherwise we give people a Grail test as well so for me Fountain life is like one of the most important uh Reinventing How We Do How We Do health care and one of the things we just launched which I'm so proud of is Fountain health and it's a so wrote in my last book um the future is FAS than you think that the insurance industry is perverted when you get when you get fire Insurance it pays you after your house burns down life insurance pays you after or pays your next can after you're dead health insurance pays you after you're sick so we created Fountain Health as a health insurance it's available for companies right now 50 employees or more and then it will grow from there but when you get found health insurance which is the same price as regular health insurance you get all the tests included at no additional cost because our goal is to uh to catch any disease first before uh it becomes something that's expensive to treat later on dude this is amazing I'm very sad that we have a hard stop today and we have reached it but dude the book is phenomenal I loved it and this catchup was absolutely amazing where can people find you and learn more about all this incredible stuff so Twitter and Instagram it's @ Peter dandis Fountain and uh uh my life horse which are the products that uh we support and then I created something called Longevity insider. org it's an AI engine that scans the world's news looking for exponential Technologies impacting vitality and longevity and it generates a uh a newsletter of the top 15 breakthroughs every day on longevity and it's free and you can unsubscribe you don't like it but it just keeps me in this positive mindset so the other place is longevity insider. org I love it yeah dude thank you so much for coming on the show it is always so good spend time with you I love it everybody read the book life force it's incredible it will blow your mind what is already possible and what's coming in the future and speaking of things it'll blow your mind if you haven't already be sure to subscribe and until next time my friends be legendary take care peace