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NOTES FROM THE KAT

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In this Issue:


Greetings [[firstname]],

Melatonin: Sleep Aide as Proven Cellular Health Promoter, too!

Melatonin is perhaps best known for supporting healthy sleep patterns that re affected by jetlag or other sleep disturbances.

Interestingly, however, regulating the circadian rhythm and other biological rhythms is only a secondary function of melatonin. Here's what else you should know about this ancient substance!

Melatonin has been found in the earliest life forms and is found in all types of organisms including bacteria, algae, fungi, plants, insects, and vertebrates. It is suspected that in most life forms, melatonin acts solely as a detoxifying agent!

Derived from the essential amino acid tryptophan, melatonin has been typically portrayed as a hormone --produced by the pineal gland, making it an endocrine hormone.

Melatonin’s benefits further include powerful antioxidant activity. Melatonin exhibits antioxidant effects more potent than vitamin E, easily crosses cell membranes and the blood-brain barrier, and thus benefits cellular energy function and cellular communication in particular.

Melatonin: Antioxidant Supporting Mitrochondrial Protection and Function

Ultimately, most of the benefits from melatonin may depend on its effects on mitochondrial physiology. Melatonin prevents mitochondrial impairment, energy failure, and even cell-death in mitochondria that have been damaged by oxidation.

If you need a refresher on mitochondria, they're the energy-producing workhorses of the cellular world. The primary role of mitochondria is to produce ATP (adenosine triphosphate) or energy from glucose.

Unfortunately, mitochondria can easily come under free radical attack, threatening cell functionality.

Ideally, intra-mitochondrial antioxidant systems should scavenge these free radicals to avoid oxidative damage and impaired ATP production. Unfortunately, during aging and disease conditions, this is not always the case.

Oxidative stress unchecked can lead to a wide range of diseases -- like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. Damaged mitochondria are unable to maintain the energy demands of cells, leading to an increased production of free radicals, and thus a vicious cycle of cell malfunction and potentially disease.

Back in 2001, researchers at the Universidad de Granada in Spain and the University of Texas at San Antonio described the link between melatonin and mitochondrial protection:

“In a series of pathologies in which high production of free radicals is the primary cause of the disease, melatonin is also protective. A common feature in these diseases is the existence of mitochondrial damage due to oxidative stress. The discoveries of new actions of melatonin in mitochondria support a novel mechanism, which explains some of the protective effects of the indoleamine on cell survival.”

In summary, melatonin aids mitochondrial health by:

  • Stimulating antioxidative enzymes

  • Scavenging a variety of toxic oxygen and nitrogen-based reactants

  • Increasing the efficiency of the electron transport chain thereby limiting electron leakage and free radical generation

  • Promoting ATP or cellular energy synthesis

Through these actions, melatonin preserves the integrity of the mitochondria and helps to maintain cell functions and survival.

For more on the benefits of melatonin, including its support of healthy moods, the immune system, etc., check out our Melatonin product page.


Health in the News


 

Kat's Notes: Shakespeare Festival in Cedar City with Dr. Rodier

Cindy and Steve drove down to the Shakespeare Festival in Cedar City this weekend to see a couple of plays with Dr. Rodier, including King Lear (in a replica of the original Globe Theater in London).

You’d think that Dr. Rodier is part feline, as I hear that he caught two (yes two) naps on Saturday, one after brunch and another after dinner and before the final play. A man after my own heart!

After dinner, knowing he had checked out of his room already, Cindy offered her jacket as a pillow, and Dr. Rodier said, “No thanks, I use my shoes” and off he went to find a place in the shade.

After King Lear finished at around 11 pm, Dr. Rodier waved goodbye, jumped in his yellow open air Jeep, and drove for over four hours under the starry night.

Two naps, nocturnal, entirely frugal, idiosyncratic hmm, Dr. Rodier is becoming one of this kat’s favorite characters! ^..^

'Til next time, fair members!

Still purringly yours,

Guido

Guido Housemouser
Chief Kat and Community Manager
Our Health Co-op

4188 Westroads Drive, Unit 123

Riviera Beach, FL 33407

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Dear Co-op,

I would like to send my congratulations. Only recently have I read in newsletters from doctors about Linus Pauling's formula for cardiovascular health.

You have been on the cutting edge for a couple of years or more by making Heart Plus available for your members at such a reasonable price.

Thank you from the bottom of my heart!

Sincerely,

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