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Sirtris Pharmaceuticals, Inc. was a biotechnology company based in Cambridge, MA that developed therapies for type 2 diabetes, cancer, and other diseases. Conceived in 2004 by Harvard University biologist David Sinclair and Andrew Perlman, [1] and founded that year by Sinclair and Perlman, along with Christoph Westphal, Richard Aldrich, Richard Pops, and Paul Schimmel, [2] the company was ...
"Good Life" is a song by American pop rock band OneRepublic, taken from their second studio album, Waking Up (2009). The song was written by group members Ryan Tedder, Brent Kutzle, and Eddie Fisher along with group associate Noel Zancanella. It was produced by Tedder, with co-production by Kutzle and Zancanella.
One Little Pill is a documentary film about the Sinclair method of treating alcohol abuse. [2] The film follows the lives of several people who have suffered from alcoholism, and have been helped by the treatment. Perspectives from scientists, treatment centers, doctors, and a legal prosecutor are also presented.
A doctor who's 78 but says he has a biological age of 57.6 shared five of the supplements he takes daily. As life expectancy has grown — the average American is expected to live until 77.5, up ...
That being said, Spector has continued to take two supplements (on top of eating a gut-healthy diet) that he said research supports. Spector takes vitamin B12 because he mostly eats plant-based
David Andrew Sinclair AO (born June 26, 1969) is an Australian-American biologist and academic known for his research on aging and epigenetics. Sinclair is a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School and the founding director of the Paul F. Glenn Laboratories for the Biological Mechanisms of Aging at Harvard.
An anti-ageing influencer who claims to have knocked 24 years off his internal age has revealed the secrets of his ultra-healthy regime.. Dave Pascoe, 61, claims to have reversed his biological ...
[14] [15] "Good Life" is an uptempo dance-pop track that incorporates whistling. [23] Described as the "poppiest song on the album", it was one of the last tracks recorded for Waking Up, being composed and produced in thirty days, while the chorus was written by Tedder in sixty seconds after the band had completed the idea for the track. [24]