As you grow older, your body becomes stiffer, less elastic, and less agile. This is due to cross-linking at a molecular level. You become stiffer for the same reason that old rubber becomes brittle and stiff—your large structural molecules such as collagen (an important protein in connective tissues) are welded together by cross-links. This process […]
Read more Cross-linked Molecules and Aging in Skin, Arteries, and Other Tissues II
- agile, bitamin B1, collagen, Cross-linking, flexibility, molecules, nutrients, PABA, vitamin A, vitamin B5, vitamin B6, vitamin c, vitamin E
Empiricism may serve to accumulate facts, but it will never build science. The experimenter who does not know what he is looking for will not understand what he finds. —Claude Bernard, 1813-1878 When your skin wrinkles, or arteries or bread hardens, or rubber becomes brittle, or old Jell-O® stiffens, we are seeing examples of the […]
Read more Cross-linked Molecules and Aging in Skin, Arteries, and Other Tissues I
- acetaldehyde, alcohol, amino acid, arteries, atherosclerosis, cancer, cells, Cross-linking, cysteine, DNA, eggs, esters, flexibility, hemorrhage, liver, metabolism, molecules, nutrients, PABA, proteins, rats, RNA, sunlight, tissues, tobacco, ultraviolet light, vitamin b, vitamin B1, vitamin c, wrinkles