MitoQ Live: Why should you care about your cells?
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Learn all about cellular health from MitoQ's Science & Education Writer Grace Mitchell.
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Learn all about cellular health from MitoQ's Science & Education Writer Grace Mitchell.
Weāre so excited to share the first episode of our āMitoQ Expertsā livestream series with you. In this episode, MitoQās Head of Brand and Communications Liz Hancock interviews Grace Mitchell, MitoQās Science and Education Writer, about cellular health. To learn about the main functions of a cell, why having a mitochondria-targeted antioxidant is important, whether young and healthy people need to worry about their cell health ā and so much more ā keep reading, watch the video below or tune into the audio version on Spotify.
Liz Hancock
Welcome! We are MitoQ ā and we are completely obsessed with cells. So, we thought we would kick off our first-ever livestream diving deep into cells. Our topic is āWhy you should care about your cellsā. Itās something that a lot of us maybe touched on at school, but then never thought about again. And, probably, a lot of people still donāt understand that much about cell health or, in fact, why they should even care about it. I remember a tiny amount of my cell health education at high school but, Grace, I wonder if you could share how your cell health journey started?
Grace Mitchell
I think it was high school. I just remember everyone saying the one thing that they took away from biology lessons was āthe mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cellā. But when I was first learning about cells, I remember learning about plant and animal cells and seeing how similar they are. Obviously, there are also differences, but I just remember looking at all of these tiny little compartments in every cell and it was just like a Russian doll effect of kind of looking at myself and realizing within my organs there are cells, in your cells there are organelles. It was quite mind-blowing.
Liz
Itās completely mind-blowing, isnāt it? Itās really, really hard to fathom that we are almost entirely made up of trillions and trillions of little cells ā and, if you isolate one, you canāt see it with the naked eye. But our entire existence depends on those cells!
Grace
I think itās a way of looking at ourselves that weāre not used to. Weāre used to seeing it in a textbook or in a scientific setting rather than equating cells as being ourselves and what we actually are ā which is pretty cool.
Liz
Completely. So, can you talk us through the main functions of the cell? I feel like this is a question that could last the entire livestream because there are so many functions, but can you summarize a little bit?
Grace
Yeah, absolutely. There are a few key functions that define a cell. One is that cells are there to provide structural support. The bones, the architecture of the ābuildingā, the framework of who we are is all thanks to cells.
Another is that they generate energy, which ties into our mitochondria being our little cellular batteries ā that's what theyāre responsible for.
A really big role of our cells is to divide and grow. Basically, a cellās whole life cycle depends on it being able to copy its DNA, replicate its proteins, grow ā and, as it gets to a certain point and it gets too big, itās going to split off and divide. Those divisions are happening, in the trillions, every day. So, that process of cells dividing and growing is how we grow as people.
Another function is that theyāre there to store our genetic information and keep it safe and make copies of it.
Cells can also have all kinds of specialized functions that are going to be different throughout the body. Thatās really the biggest thing that separates humans from bacteria ā the fact that we evolved that ability to have specialized cells with different roles, rather than just being one cell that does it all.
Liz
Thereās so much complexity in it and most of us donāt get up every day thinking at that type of deep level. So, what does having good cell health mean to people on a day-to-day basis?
Grace
I think when you consider the fact that we are totally made out of cells, our mental and physical health all boils down to what is happening at this foundational level. I think people have conversations going, Iām working on my health at the moment. Iām working on my fitness at the moment. No one really talks about yeah, Iām really just trying to prioritize my cellular health right now. So, it is totally this new, undiscovered field, really ā which makes it seem mysterious. But itās actually really, really simple: everything starts in your cells. So, if youāre nourishing your cells, doing whatās best by your cells, and thinking about the changes that happen as you age then that correlates to your mental and physical health.
Liz
I feel like once you become aware of the importance of your cells and that everything kind of starts inside the cell, you kind of become a bit of a squeaky door because ā talking to friends and family who might be telling you things like I just canāt stay awake past 2pm in the afternoon, Iām like āoh yeah, that starts inside your cells, itās because your cells are stressed.ā
Grace
Honestly, as soon as you become familiar with the concept, itās just such a no-brainer, right? Like, why would you not try to prioritize keeping your cells healthy as you get older? Because we know that small changes snowball and accumulate.
But yeah, itās getting that conversation going ā which is what weāre here to do.
So, a big one that we talk about a lot here at MitoQ is that the accumulation of free radical damage can harm your cells. What that is, is when our mitochondria in our cells are producing energy (which is what the body runs on for fuel), a by-product of that process is that they release these free radical molecules which are quite unstable and they can damage cellular components. Up to a certain threshold, those free radicals are useful ā they have roles in the cell. But beyond a certain threshold, that tips into what we call oxidative stress or cell stress ā and that tends to increase as we get older. That oxidative stress can lead to cell damage and mitochondrial damage, and that has flow-on effects as your cell replicate and divide and pass those genetics on. So, free radical damage is a really big one that ties in with a lot of other things:
Itās kind of all these things we know are not great for us.
Liz
All those no-brainer things, right? Itās what your mama told you: exercise, get sleep, drink enough water, eat good food.
Grace
Exactly. All of those things are contributing to cell stress. So, we know those things arenāt great for us but itās interesting to see in the literature that, yes, those things are stressing you out on a cellular level, not just on that macro level.
Liz
One of the analogies I always use when Iām trying to describe free radicals ā which are quite a mind-blowing concept ā is āitās like throwing a dinner party and everythingās humming along, youāre having a great evening, and then you get some gatecrashers and they start trashing your house and setting fires. The house is your cell, and that kind of spirals out of control and you, as the host, spend all of your time putting out the fires and looking after the damage instead of hosting the dinner partyā.
If your brain cells are trying to do one of the many hundreds of functions of your brain, theyāre not concentrating on that, theyāre concentrating on getting their house in order.
Grace
Yeah, thatās a really great way to think about it.
Liz
So then, if you are managing cell stress, what kind of benefits are you going to see showing up?
Grace
Again, itās a commonsense answer, really. Because every single part of your body is made out of cells, there is no organ or body part that is not going to be to be affected by your cellular health. Not saying that focusing on good cell health practices is going to make you this superhuman person ā but good cell health does underpin the health of your whole body. Itās a very interconnected, interdependent process that weāre not used to thinking about. Weāre not taught it in textbooks. Thatās why I think itās great that weāve now got this platform to be able to talk about it.
Liz
So true. A lot of people, when weāre talking about MitoQ and all of the many benefits or, you know, just generally looking after your cell health, people kind of call BS on it because, you know, you can say you can maybe experience better mental clarity and better daily energy and youāll recover faster from exercise and you just generally feel more healthy ā and people call BS on it because theyāre used to going oh, Iām low in iron so I take an iron supplement. Or Iām getting a cold, so I take vitamin C, and theyāre used to those single solutions for a single purpose. But when you say that MitoQ or good cell health can have these wider benefits, people arenāt used to thinking holistically.
Grace
Absolutely. I think especially in our Western kind of mindset weāre used to thinking of things as being in a vacuum. So, when youāre going on about things happening within your cells, if youāre not at the point of thinking of yourself as a composite of cells ā it's totally just not even within the ballpark.
But it is interesting because weāve seen now that, like you said, people take vitamin C for a cold ā where that has been proven to be false. MitoQ is clinically proven to help fight oxidative stress. I think we get used to just accepting that brain fog and low energy just is what it is and we just tough it out. But those are signs of oxidative stress and MitoQ is clinically proven to help fight that. We want to be living the best life that we possibly can so why not prioritize your cell health?
Grace
Itās the super regular, boring things. Youāve got to wear sunscreen. Really focus on a nutrient-dense diet with all the carbs, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals that your body needs. Your cells, at their very basic level, require water, oxygen and food. The food that youāre eating forms the membranes of your cells. So, if youāve decided youāre going to cut out fats as a whole group, that affects the membranes of your cells.
Another thing is oxygen: we need to breathe properly. Keep breathing!
Other things we can do are things like managing stress and really prioritizing sleep. There are genetic factors that you canāt control, so itās best to just focus on what you can control. Part of that is having these good practices: having a good diet, getting regular exercise, etc. You can help this along by taking clinically proven antioxidants too. There are some antioxidants which are great for the general cell. MitoQ is an example, which is great for your mitochondria as a targeted antioxidant.
Liz
We dove in boots first but we havenāt actually talked about MitoQ. I donāt want to spend too much time talking about it because our mission is educating and awakening people to the importance of their cells and cell health. But I think it would be good to just talk a little about MitoQ and what makes it so special and how itās different to the everyday antioxidants that people might typically reach for on the supermarket shelf.
Grace
So, when you define MitoQ, itās defined as a mitochondria-targeted antioxidant. That whole sentence is something that people potentially wonāt understand if there isnāt a little bit of context to go with it. So, itās a cell health molecule. Itās classed as a supplement but itās a more advanced version of a supplement. So, what it does is itās specifically targeted to your mitochondria to work as an antioxidant that fights free radicals at the source where theyāre produced. Most free radicals come from the mitochondria. Remember, free radicals are damaging our cells, they cause oxidative stress ā and that all increases with age and leads to damage to our cells and to our energy-producing powerhouses.
A lot of things tend to happen with age. Weāve got this sort of in-built clock which is really interesting because across all animal species you can see this clock moving at different rates. There is this free radical theory of aging which says that free radicals increase with age and that leads to all the hazardous effects of aging. That theory isnāt a straightforward story, but it is part of the story. Free radicals are associated with aging and they do underpin a lot of the effects that come with aging.
So itās quite interesting because no one is 100% sure why we age or whether thereās one particular protein switch that controls it all. Itās a complex story which is why MitoQ isnāt an āanti-aging cureā, itās something to help you age in a healthy manner and something to support your cells as youāre getting older.
Liz
Anti-aging definitely is something we strike off the vernacular at MitoQ because our whole focus is about living, itās not about anti-aging. We just want to help people to live in good health for as long as possible.
So, why then is having a mitochondria targeting antioxidant important, versus a regular antioxidant?
Grace
The mitochondria, as I mentioned, produces most of the free radical damage that happens in the cell so itās also the biggest target for damage within the cell. Most ingredients canāt actually get into the mitochondria because it has the double membrane thatās hard to pass into.
MitoQ was originally invented off of CoQ10 which, as people may have heard, is an antioxidant that naturally exists in the energy-producing machinery within your mitochondria. The problem with CoQ10 is that it is quite big and itās not that easy to get into the mitochondria. So here, in New Zealand, our founding scientists found a way to tweak the CoQ10 molecule so that it was smaller and attracted directly to the mitochondria. So, MitoQ fulfills a niche that most other antioxidants cannot do. Mitochondria targeted antioxidants are a very cutting-edge thing in biotech.
Liz
Weāve spoken about this a little bit already, weāve spoken about fatigue, but what are some of the other signs?
Grace
The important thing here is that every person is different. We all know someone who eats super unhealthily and maybe they party every weekend but they still tend to feel amazing and their health is awesome ā maybe until they hit 40 or 50, then maybe it all comes crashing down. So, itās really about paying attention to your body and whatās going on in your body like: feeling really brain-fogged, you have really low energy, itās difficult getting to sleep at night or getting up in the morning, you have those general kinds of aches and pains ā those are all signs of oxidative stress. Just getting used to paying attention to that when your body is whispering rather than when your body is shouting is important as is accepting that itās not ājust lifeā - you can actually do something about it in a lot of cases.
Liz
That was one of the first big revelations for me when I first started taking MitoQ. I was in my late 40s and I was working as a journalist and I came across it. Really loved the science, started taking it and, being honest, didnāt notice a massive boost but I believed enough in the science to know that it was something good to take for my long-term health. For many reasons, you know, having another child, I stopped taking it again and when I came to work at MitoQ a few years ago I started taking it again with zero expectations of what I was going to get out of it and then was really surprised. A couple of weeks in I just woke up one morning and went oh, hello! Hang on, I feel like bouncing out of bed. This is unusual.
I think we hear it time and again ā all of our customers have different experiences, all of the MitoCrew have different experiences ā because weāre not all cookie-cutter, are we?
Grace
Absolutely. When I started taking it, I was the same. I didnāt really notice anything super obvious but then when I was doing a workout I noticed that I could just push that bit harder. Now, if I donāt take MitoQ before going to the gym itās like what was I thinking?!
But I think thatās the great thing, everyone does experience it differently. Itās not one of those things where weāre like please take it, please see the effects ā people will write in and just say itās done this for me or itās done this for me ā so everyone does have that individual experience.
Liz
Youāve been talking about aging and, for me personally, as Iāve aged Iāve definitely noticed a need and a difference, taking MitoQ. But what if youāre younger? Youāre still made of cells but, in terms of the decline of the health and functioning of those cells, should you be taking MitoQ?
Grace
This is a good question because when youāre younger things tend to be working more smoothly. You havenāt accumulated all that damage that builds up over the years. So, from this perspective you could say you donāt need to take it, everything is still running pretty well. From the other point of view, being aware of cell health when youāre young and building those good practices kind of has that snowball effect. Itās good to get those good practices in place now and preserve your cell health now, through things like sleep, diet and hydration ā it may include taking MitoQ as well. It really just depends on the individual person and their needs.
So that can be really helpful.
There are some young people who I would say itās not a priority for them, they donāt need to take it. Me, definitely, Iām like...yeah, I need to take my MitoQ because I just notice what a huge difference it makes. So, again, it does come down to the individual and what their priorities are.
Liz
I know we have a lot of young sportspeople, particularly a lot of 18-19-year-old cyclists who have crazy energy needs. You know, theyāve got to go out and perform on the bike for hours at a stretch and then recover really fast and be out racing on the bike the next day. A lot of those cyclists have been taking MitoQ for a good year or two and they really are a testament to how it can help them do that day in and day out.
Grace
Yeah, I think thatās a really great point. I was reading a study recently ā obviously, itās more of a common problem that people arenāt exercising enough rather than people are exercising too much, but research is starting to show that over-exercising and over-training/the amount of training youāre doing at the elite athlete level does correlate with decreased mitochondrial respiration. That kind of accumulates and affects your mitochondrial function. I think the study was based on high-intensity interval training. So, if youāre doing loads of exercise and youāre really pushing your body to that upper limit, then taking MitoQ is a great idea.
Liz
You mentioned studies there, and I want to touch on that. I know MitoQ just crossed 700 research papers, studies and clinical trials ā which is pretty huge. Itād be great for you to talk to that a little bit because I know a lot of people donāt understand that we donāt actually fund all of those studies, we have no influence on what people are studying MitoQ for, we literally just provide the molecule for the science community around the world to go and see what it can do.
Grace
I totally understand peopleās confusion around this because, if you havenāt come from a scientific background, the way that the research works can be really confusing. It doesnāt help that, in some cases, companies will sponsor studies and conduct their own studies. So, I think the key difference here is we have scientists coming to us asking to use MitoQ in their trials or studies. Itās not us going out and paying scientists to study this and make up results about us. It is all independent research. It is peer-reviewed research. Any kind of biases or vested interest statements have to be laid out. So, we donāt have a sway on the results - unless itās a study where weāre directly working with the researchers, which is very rare (and itās funded and called out in the study). The most that we do is provide researchers with product - because MitoQ is the only place where you can get our molecule.
I think thatās a really important point to emphasize: we have researchers coming to us. Theyāre excited about MitoQ and theyāre excited about what the molecule can do. So, we just get to kind of find out all this awesome stuff that pops up all the time.
Liz
I think whatās also really exciting is that, when our molecule was first invented 20 years ago, it was right at the start of the cellular health explosion. Back then, no one really knew much about cellular health. Hell, a lot of people didnāt even know that much about mitochondria beyond the basic physiological function of it. Since the invention of MitoQ, this whole area is absolutely exploding ā it's kind of one of the biggest waves in healthcare coming, isnāt it?
Grace
Absolutely, and mitochondria in general have been overlooked for a really long time in biology. So, as science is progressing, weāre learning more about the mitochondria and everything that it can do. That's why our studies have been ramping up so much as well. Much like, maybe 20 years ago, no one really knew how probiotics worked, I can see MitoQ going the same way as well.
Grace
So, this is a really good point. Unfortunately, we donāt really have studies comparing taking MitoQ and taking medications at the same time. Thatās something we would really love to have some research done on. At the moment, we can kind of piggyback on some of the research thatās been done on CoQ10 a little bit, just because they do have similar functions ā they're not the exact same thing, but similar functions. So, we would encourage anyone thatās taking medication to get in touch with us and talk about the individual situation. In general, MitoQ doesnāt have any known contraindications ā but just get in touch with us if you have any specific concerns or talk to your healthcare professional.
Grace
Iām fascinated by the fact that since the dawn of multicellular organisms and before humans walked the earth, there was this initial DNA program that was installed into the first multi-cellular thing ever. Over time, that program has had little bug fixes and little updates and tweaks from generation to generation. But that same ancient script is what is still in our cells today. Itās the same program. Itās the same early installation. That is fascinating to me because cells donāt (that we know of) have a consciousness, they donāt know what theyāre doing. Theyāre running off of this ancient manuscript. Theyāre running off of chemical gradients and bioelectric signals ā and thatās how our cells are working. Theyāre doing all of these amazing reactions. So, to me, that is just mind-blowing. If you were to unravel that script, I think it would extend all the way to Pluto.
Grace
My favorite cell is the human egg cell. What fascinates me about it is that as a reproductive cell it has a unique function that no other cell could possibly fulfill, itās one of the largest cells in the human body (it can actually be seen, I think itās about the size of a grain of sand), and when you are a fetus in your motherās womb - as far as we know at the moment ā you have all the eggs that youāre ever going to have for the rest of your life. So, thereās this balance between function and longevity here where those eggs have to stay in pristine condition for 40-50 years and still be able to produce a new human and maintain their reproductive capacity. All of that is fascinating, but itās also what we donāt know thatās fascinating. We donāt know why humans produce so many eggs. Thereās so much that still needs to be understood and I just think thatās amazing ā when we think we have everything figured out but thereās still all this unknown about something that makes new humans.
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