Are Psychedelics the Key to Living Forever? (ft. Bryan Johnson)
Bryan Johnson discusses his recent 5-MeO-DMT experience as part of his longevity research, describing it as the most profound human experience possible. He shares data from psychedelic experiments showing dramatic brain rejuvenation effects and explores upcoming longevity therapies including mitochondrial transplantation and gene therapy.
- Psychedelics may represent a breakthrough longevity therapy by resetting the brain's default mode network and creating neuroplasticity equivalent to decades of psychological rejuvenation
- The brain is the most difficult organ to rejuvenate compared to other body systems, making psychedelic interventions uniquely valuable for maintaining youthful cognitive patterns
- Mitochondrial transplantation using young family members' mitochondria could provide significant anti-aging benefits by replacing degraded mitochondrial DNA
- Creating personalized organoids from stem cells enables rapid testing of therapeutic interventions before human trials, accelerating longevity research
- General health improvements across populations could reduce social conflict and increase collective well-being by addressing the root causes of internal unhappiness
"This is without question the most dynamic experience I've ever experienced as a human"
"I am more interested than ever in psychedelic compounds. They're just uniquely powerful"
"If I subjectively compare my experience with 5MEO to having a better diet and exercising every day and sleeping well and doing the sauna and doing hyperbaric oxygen therapy, this was more efficacious than all of them"
"Can humans change fast enough in the world where AI is the dominant engine of innovation?"
"I felt like it was like 30, 40 years of psychological rejuvenation. You know, it's like to transport me back to a childlike state"
Brian Johnson, thanks for being here.
0:00
Yeah, it's good to see you.
0:01
How are you feeling? Maybe just share with us what you did a few days ago and yeah,
0:02
I did A. I did 5 Meo DMT, which is the most powerful psychedelic on the planet. Somewhere between five and 10 times more powerful than DMT. And so, yeah, it's. So it's been 48 hours. I'm still learning how to talk about it.
0:05
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0:23
Two things. One, mostly as a longevity experiment. So when we, when I started this project five years ago, the, the approach we had was go through all the scientific evidence ever published on health and longevity, try to find the interventions that have the best evidence for effect size. And we just went down the list from top performing on down. So of course you start with exercise, nutrition, you know, sleep, and you work your way down to things like hyperbaric oxygen therapy and sauna and then rapamycin, metformin. And so we never actually had on our radar psychedelics. They were always either an ancient medicine, you know, being used in ritualistic practices, or being pointed at things like depression and anxiety in certain trials. But it was never understood as a rejuvenation protocol, something that was for anti aging. And so we found a preclinical evidence in mice on psilocybin. We thought, that's interesting. And so we did the world's most studied, the most quantified experiment doing psilocybin. Three doses at 25 milligrams of psilocybin,
0:58
which are pretty high doses.
2:00
Yeah, it's a clinical dose. Very, very close to a hero dose. And we found that we think it's a longevity therapy.
2:01
Let's get to that data in a minute. But then you decided to try five MEO this weekend.
2:08
Yes.
2:13
Walk me through the experience. Because you televised the whole thing. It was live streamed. You looked amazingly calm going into it and going through the process. Walk us through your experience.
2:14
Yeah, I think those who have done five. Meo would probably relate with me that it feels like an impossible task to explain what it's like. So that caveat said, I'll give it a go. I'm stunned, absolutely floored, speechless. You, you basically experience raw consciousness and raw intelligence. It's this. So whatever, when I say these words, take these words that I commit to you take that idea, multiply it by a thousand and then move out. Infinite depth, infinite width, width and depth and then dimensions. And like that gives you kind of like a rough map of like the size and space that you deal with. And it was incredibly hard because you, you get blasted into this space that is so foreign you don't even know what's happening.
2:26
It happens very quickly.
3:22
Like you, you inhale it. I did 9 milligrams of intramuscular and then 718 of it of vaporized and it hits you within 10 seconds. You're just abs, you're out. And so, but what happens is you, you get in that space and then visual changes. Very, very little visual like you see on dmt. It's a very visual. You'll meet the, you know, like the elves or whatever else. This is not a visual experience. But you, you get in this world and you lock in to. Basically you either panic because you feel like the gates of hell are going to open, that the, the stream of existence is gonna just tear you to shreds, it's gonna shard you. And if you give up, like break your brain. Yeah. You feel like it's gonna like threaten your sanity. Like, is it gonna chop you up into little pieces? And so in that moment you have to say, do I try to wrestle this and I, I need to just like wait it out until it's over? Or you just relent and you say yes. And you have to, in that moment you have to say yes so thoroughly, you have to release all attachment, all preconditions, all want, all desire. You have to release self ego control. You just have to just relent entirely. And then when you do that, it opened up this unimaginable bliss and euphoria. And again, this is like a V1 of trying to explain this, but if I list out the most dynamic experiences I've had of a human accomplishments, or getting married or having a child, or overcoming a difficulty or state your list of things. This is without question the most dynamic experience I've ever experienced as a human.
3:23
Does the internal chatter, the internal monologue of the ego turn off does. So you can't hear yourself speaking. How do you rationalize what's going on. If you don't have a dialogue going
5:19
on, it's this visceral feeling like you're. You're hyper aware of what's happening. It's not like you, you, you black out in the first. Like we take a very high dose. You don't really know what's happening the first few minutes, but then you kind of come to and you're hyper aware of everything. It's not visual, but it's. You're in the depths of existence like this. It's just the most majestic experience achievable by him, by intelligent life. I just can't imagine anything more miraculous.
5:30
You've studied the biology, the biochemistry, what goes on in the brain as this molecule hits your neurons. Yeah.
6:11
One, it completely dissolves your default mode network.
6:21
Describe what that is.
6:25
So, like, this is the engine that constructs self and ego. And so as you ruminate, you know, like you're going through, thinking through your day.
6:26
What's next? How am I feeling?
6:36
Yeah.
6:38
What should I be doing right now? Constant conversation.
6:38
Yeah. Do I feel bad about myself? Do I feel, you know, like I. Am I shy? Am I, like, do I feel bad about whatever? Like, you're doing this rumination stuff. Kids don't have this rumination loop. Their default mode network is quiet. And as you age, you basically build up this default mode network into more stiffer patterns. And so as you age, your experience of reality becomes increasingly narrow. You have these big ruts that form. And so you can just see people in their patterns, like how open a child is to say, like very random things. And as adults, you're just very. You'll shut in. Like when I did psilocybin. One of the reasons why we did it is because it does have this effect where it dampens the default mode network. Now we could pick this up with kernel, the brain interface. You can see how the default mode network weakens. So basically, think of the brain like a globe with airports scattered about. And you have certain traffic patterns, like New York to London. You have a certain number of flights every day. That's like a very strong connection. But New York to some small town in Arkansas has a very low traffic map. And so when you do something like psilocybin, it basically takes the airports, picks them up, and then repositions around the world. So it's just all scrambled. So the traffic patterns aren't the same.
6:41
And then over time, the neurons don't physically move, but the activity shifts around.
7:52
Exactly right.
7:57
The neurons are A little bit more random than they normally would be, which arguably drives neuroplasticity, causes those neurons to reach out for new connections. And when new connections are made, new behaviors, new ways of thinking emerge.
7:57
Exactly right.
8:11
Coming out of these therapeutics, is that a fair way to describe it?
8:12
That's exactly right. So you look at my brain on psilocybin from kernel, you see my patterns before, like the New York to London connection, you see my brain afterwards. And it's exactly what you said. New patterns are emergent. The old ones have quieted down. It's like a new map of connectivity. And so we saw that happen. And that does generate a lot of neuroplasticity.
8:14
And obviously this neuroplasticity, rewiring these connections in the brain is what allows trauma victims or folks that have a certain wiring that they keep repeating in their brain, which causes the trauma and the anxiety in their lives to get rewired. And then that trauma and that anxiety feels like it dissolves or melts away. Is that a fair.
8:33
Exactly right.
8:51
Yeah, yeah. And so this has been documented in psilocybin. It's kind of well understood. How did you connect that psilocybin data to an effort in longevity? Or was this just like a random idea? Let's try it out.
8:52
So we saw some mouse data that it had these effects. It also showed reduced inflammation. So we said like, this is interesting because most longevity therapies do something with inflammation, right. Like inflammation is the killer. So if you can lower inflammation, a very good sign. If you can do something that makes the brain more youthful and takes down those, those big ruts, that's use also useful. What we found at psilocybin though is that it had, we found a first in human observation. It had this, this metabolic reset in the brain where my blood glucose before this was in the top 99.5 percentile of all the population.
9:06
Okay.
9:42
After it went to the top 99.9 percentile, like to move my blood glucose from that level is very, very hard. But basically like not like metformin, where you're doing something on blood glucose. This just had a reset across the body. Also changed my microbiome. So we saw full on effects. So then we said, okay, if that had that consequence, 5 Meo may have some similar characteristics.
9:43
So no one had done this in 5 Meo before.
10:05
Exactly. So there's like, there's potential, there's answers from animal evidence, but it's the similar dynamics of like, can you take the brain and can you basically like Smooth out the barnacles that accumulate. And 5 MeO DMT compared to psilocybin, like, just absolutely, like blasted clean. My default mode network, it felt like psilocybin dampens it, like, it softens it. But this thing just annihilated my default mode.
10:06
Turned it off completely. Yeah, it just doesn't run the same way.
10:34
Like, for an example, like, this morning I woke up catching myself laughing in a dream. I have not laughed in a dream. I don't even know when I've ever laughed in a dream. But that is after I woke up. I was like, that's really weird. Like, I don't remember laughing. I looked it up and like, that is a characteristic of a child.
10:38
Right.
10:55
And so you are restored to this childlike state. And I mean, the past couple days I have felt childlike. You know, yesterday morning I felt that, you know, that emergent excitement, the bubbling of, like, today is so exciting. I'm going to do new things, I'm going to have new experiences that you're just excited about all things. I haven't felt that. I don't even know when you know, for so many years. So, like, it really was profound on every layer. And I see. And I'm stumbling too. Cause I didn't even talk about it yet.
10:56
During the day, you're hanging out, you're walking around. Is your brain having the same normal chatter that it did before? Or do you think that there's a persistent change in that default mode network?
11:27
Yeah, definitely a change. Like, I was with my partner Kate yesterday and we. I did something that made her upset. And so like, in that situation, you know, like when. When couples are in that moment, you have like this negotiation. How do I sort this? And it all just became so clear to me. Like, when children have a fight, you have it out and it's just like, done.
11:38
Yeah.
12:04
And you move on. But then adults take that and they like, package it up and like, they want to weaponize it. Be like, I got something on you.
12:04
Right.
12:10
I'm like, move it. I'm going to move the chess pieces and like, try to leverage this. And.
12:11
Or they stored up like a snake in one of those things that pops out all the snakes later. You know, it's like, package it all up.
12:14
Exactly.
12:19
Yeah.
12:20
And so, like, we had this and I just felt absolutely, like, no need to escalate or to defend or to like, it was just easy. And it was a breakthrough in our relationship where I was able to communicate with her in a way. And so it's like, laughing in my sleep. It's how I deal with my partner. When I walk around, I just feel so much. I, I feel so much more funny, you know, like my ability to make quips that are just immediate, you know, like. So, yeah, I just feel renewed as a person in a way that I just really didn't imagine.
12:20
Have you tried hallucinogenics before you started your longevity path? A couple of years ago, yeah. And did you do that recreationally or therapeutically?
12:56
It was mostly therapeutic in that I, I had sold my company branch of M.O. i got a divorce, I left the Mormon Church and I was trying to remap, like, what is life? Who am I? What do I do? So I was in that rebuilding stage where I just dabbled of, like, you know, I did, I did ketamine at Colonel So one of our first studies at Colonel is we said ketamine was a up and coming therapy for depression. And we posed the question, what happens when you do ketamine? And so we did the world's most extensive measurement on ketamine with kernel before, during and after. And so that was interesting. Like, and it had some kind of, you know, transient effect, but that's like a, a, a, like a little league relative to 5 Meo.
13:07
And so as you've gone through this, maybe share a little bit of the MRI data that you're gathering and the other data mapping neurological effects.
13:47
Yeah.
13:55
And tell us a little bit about what you've learned so far.
13:55
Nothing. I have my subjective experience to share, but we have a structural brain mri. We have a functional brain mri. We did kernel, which is like an optical interface. And then I did real time EEG capture.
13:58
And we should just talk about, I think it's important. Structural. You can see the physical brain functional. You can see the activity in the brain. So neurons firing and neurons that are not firing. Right. Yeah. And then electrical actions that are measured by an electrical device.
14:10
So we basically like, wanted. Because the brain is very. So we've had a lot of success rejuvenating my heart and my lungs and muscle and body fat. But rejuvenating the brain is very hard.
14:27
Right.
14:38
And so we, this is why this is such a promising therapy. So we wanted to look at the brain through every modality possible. We wanted to look at blood flow, structural, molecular, you know, the wave pattern form. So it's a, it's a very high fidelity quantification. And so we'll see what the data comes out. I'm very excited. Yeah.
14:39
You did this on psilocybin as well. Right. You map the brain over time. What did you learn there?
14:57
Dramatic restoration of youthful brain patterns.
15:01
Yeah, right, yeah. And what comes after five? Me. You know, I mean, how far do you take this? Yeah.
15:06
Honestly, I am so encouraged by psychedelics. I, you know, like in, in the community where I hang out, psychedelics have always been understood as, you know, it's like a retreat or it's like a, a ritual. You go to like do various explorations, but never in the world of longevity. It's never been understood as that thing. And now after seeing the data, now I. And of course, you have to be very careful when talking about psychedelics because they're extremely powerful. It's not like, go out and do them, everybody. Right. It's like it needs to be done properly with a licensed professional. It needs to be done carefully. The person needs to be in the right state. Like, it is not to be taken lightly, but I am more interested than ever in psychedelic compounds. They're just uniquely powerful.
15:15
There's some arguments to be made that, that psychedelics can induce permanent psychosis, cause functional changes and drive some people that might be predisposed into schizophrenic states.
16:04
That's right.
16:17
How did you get over those risks? Because for a lot of people that would turn them off to trying psychedelics and it's not a non zero percentage of people that suffer these consequences.
16:17
Yep, I agree. And also people who have really bad trips that leave them scarred. So it's, it really is. And I think in part of it is what could be contributing to this is people who, for example, have tried magic mushrooms. You know, it's in a social situation, someone's got a bag, you pull out some mushrooms, it's like, yeah, like ways blank and they pop it in, but they have no idea what kind of mushroom strain they're eating. They don't know what the dose of psilocybin is. So it's like unquantified, unsupervised, wrong set and setting and so much of it. I think you can. The risk persists, but I don't think we've approached psychedelics with the appropriate rigor that we should to make it safe. And so it's not to say that we can solve for the safety issue for all people. Some people just may not be the appropriate candidate for it. But I think if we do create a safety structure around it, they could deliver the benefits people want without with less of the risk. But definitely I agree with you. Again, it deserves all the caution in the world.
16:28
Do you think it's like neurogenic, neuroplasticity, trauma resolution? I mean, what is the way that this is going to be allowed to become, Call it a medical therapeutic that can be more broadly trialed and then eventually figure out how to bring it to people without it being carrying all the risks and burdens that it does today.
17:27
I mean, if I just subjectively compare my experience with 5MEO to having a better diet and exercising every day and sleeping well and doing the sauna and doing hyperbaric oxygen therapy, this was more efficacious than all of them. In terms of the reset of me as a human. It just is incomparable. And I guess I'm really left pondering for this molecule to have such a gigantic impact now, like, how long will it last? What's the decay curve? Like, will I find I become the former Brian Within 30 days, 60 days? I have to repeat this again. I don't know, but it really is, you know, when you sleep well, you feel great, you exercise great, but like, Nothing like what 5MEO did in terms of like the reset of me as a human.
17:46
So let's just talk about the consequences outside of the physiological, which is life.
18:35
Yeah.
18:41
There are lots of stories and friends that I have that and people that I know that have tried a heavy psychedelic like an ayahuasca or something. They were the CEO of a company and then they quit their company and they go off to the jungle, leave their family, divorce their, their partner, make such dramatic life changes because their perspective has been shifted so much that they reevaluate what matters in life to such a degree that they give up a lot of the things that mattered before.
18:41
Yeah.
19:11
In the wake of that, there are people that feel they're a victim of that behavioral shift. The investors in the company, the employees, the family members, etc. Can you just talk a little bit about those broad risks? Because we've seen it and I don't know if you've seen the same, but friends that have kind of like said, I have this new perspective. I'm giving up my life.
19:12
I've seen the same thing. And one investor told me that he even put it in the deal docs that, you know, if we invest, you're not going to do these psychedelics because they wanted to minimize the risk profile. It's a thing in your deal, in
19:34
an investment, in you.
19:48
No, I just. Because I've been doing this. People bring this up as a topic of conversation. Right. And so they say, like, I see you're doing this for longevity. But you know, like, I've seen so many examples where people put money in, then you lose. The founder, like, they're off, they're gone, everyone's high and dry. And so they were telling me that they put into deal docs that they can't do this for the duration of the company. So it is a thing. And you know, I, I have nothing to say about it other than I know what happens. Also, I would say that most people in the tech world that I'm familiar with, again, they've done this in retreat centers or in social environments. It's not quantified, it's not set and setting, so it's a different thing. But I will say, like, you know, I, I guess me as a person, what I'm trying to focus on, I came back even more motivated to do what I'm doing now. I don't have a desire to go off in the woods, you know, and like, and live that kind of life. Emboldened me to work on these things. But no question about it, you, you do have a dramatic shift in perspective and it's very hard to get to.
19:48
It begs a very important philosophical question. Who am I?
20:57
Yes.
21:01
If I'm defined by my experiences, it roughly equates to my neurons are wired in a way that's a consequence of my experiences. And if I go in and take a drug and in a few hours rewire all my neurons, am I the same person?
21:03
Yeah.
21:21
What makes Brian, Brian? You can maybe recall some memories of Brian prior to taking the psychedelic, but Brian as a person has been rewired. Are you a different person now? And what does that say about are we ever a persistent person? Right.
21:21
Yeah. Your question is spot on. Probably the most dramatic reconstruction of your 60/trillion cells that anything you can do in life, maybe like a near death experience, would maybe be close. But it's a dramatic rewiring of you as a human.
21:37
Your values can change too.
21:55
That's right.
21:56
And you could judge the values pre and post. Right. You could judge values ascribed to you by a religion, or perhaps values ascribed to you by responsibility to family members, children, spouses, partners, what have you. You abandon them after you go through this change. So your values have changed. Is it right or wrong?
21:57
That's right.
22:16
I think it's another important question that comes out of all this.
22:16
I agree. And like you, you now, like you now think about that. That's through the frame where the world changes at a certain speed. Now you take the world where it's changing faster. So we now know that it's hard to predict what's going to happen two weeks from now or a month. Right. Like things are changing very quickly. And so now you come up with this practical question. Can humans change fast enough in the world where AI is the dominant engine of innovation? And so in that case, you may want psychedelics as your ally, to say, as a human, I'm struggling to move with the change.
22:19
Yeah.
22:54
And so there's potentially where it. It flips from a liability to an asset, where now I do want that restructure changing, even though you have some tail risk of like, maybe my priorities will shift.
22:55
I think you have profound, what I would call psycho flexibility. And I think most people don't. They have either a disinterest in changing who they are overnight or they're fearful of the ramifications or the experience and that they wouldn't go through it. How far would you take it? Would you wire yourself up to a neuralink or neural enhancement device that would give you the ability to have information on demand and maybe change your personality and capacity as a human through an implant? Would you consider doing something like that? Yes. You would. Would you consider a transgenic system where you basically take a plasmid which would then express a set of proteins in your body and change gene expression profiles and cells in your body and basically could rewire you as a different person?
23:06
Yes.
23:51
Yes. Is there a limit to what you would try? Interesting. Where do you think that comes from?
23:51
I think I find it to be the most exciting configuration of life. The ability to play on the frontier. Novelty and expedition and challenge. That's really my.
23:55
Did you always have it or are you responding to childhood suppression of those?
24:09
It's probably an overcompensation of trauma response like most things are. And so, you know, as a child, I lived in a very structured religious environment where things were cemented. Like, here's the story, here's the plan, here's what you do and what you don't do.
24:15
Yeah.
24:28
And so, yeah, maybe it's probably just I'm now flipped in the opposite. And so, I mean, that's like, probably true that I really. I don't trust my internal generation of reality. You know, I know I'm always making things up. I've got 188 Chronicle biases like all humans do. So I'm just. I'm generally suspicious of all things all time. And I don't take myself very seriously. So I just find the frontier play space to be like Right now, I mean, you know, what you're doing in building a company is like, you just open up a toolkit and say, like, what can I build? And how do I modify? And so I agree with you. I do have a strong proclivity towards openness of play.
24:29
Do you find that you've been challenged in maintaining, I would call it external responsibility? As you explore and enhance yourself so much, do you give up the responsibility to others around you who maybe are dependent on you or in need of you?
25:06
Yeah, I have three kids, and so I do think about them a lot. And I. Being a father is a really important thing to me and it's an important part of my identity. And so that has not changed. So I've never vacillated on that or changed my disposition towards that for those around me, I guess, fortunately, I have a social group that just says, go and play. There's really no one in my life that tries to claw me back. There's no Velcro. It's just all encouraging. And so that. I guess I feel very fortunate that everyone around me and they're willing to take the risks. I mean, this is when I sat down for five meo. I mean, my partner, Kate, like, she's got a ton of risk. Like, what if it goes poorly? What if I change my perspectives? What if something bad happens? So.
25:19
Well, one could make an argument that taking that degree of risk, where something could have gone wrong, the people around you are enabling versus being supportive. Right, that's right. That's right. I mean, yeah, that's right. That's a consequence. But let's shift topics to other modalities for longevity.
26:04
Yeah.
26:22
What else is on the horizon? So you've had this profound set of experiences with psychedelics. You've documented in a very extraordinary and exquisite fashion all of the other things that you've been doing with interventions. Are there other things that are on the horizon that you're either excited about or that you're considering yourself?
26:23
Yeah, I mean, two of the ones that we've spoken about, cell therapy and gene therapy, they're all in the pipeline, so they're not ready yet. We've knocked out all the stuff you can do today. We've gone through it all, done it. All the next gen therapies are just not there yet. So we're looking at mitochondrial rejuvenation.
26:39
I think that's incredible. I think mitochondrial augmentation therapy. And there was a paper I saw where in order to get the mitochondria in the cell, they Coated the mitochondria in effectively a red blood cell envelope, which made it more transportable into cells and less attacked by the immune system.
26:57
Yeah, exactly.
27:13
Which is incredible. And I'm a big, big, big believer in this course of therapeutics. I think it's gonna be a whole therapeutic modality that no one has even recognized.
27:13
I agree. We have our first mitochondrial therapy lined up. So how are you going to do it?
27:22
You're like 99.9%. You need someone who's like 48.7% to try the mitochondrial.
27:26
I agree.
27:32
Particularly like, you know, I think they tried it in Parkinson's patients, Alzheimer's patients. That's where you could really see profound shifts in, in certain metrics. For you, it's like 99.9 to what, like.
27:33
Yeah, yeah, I have the mitochondria, you know, of a 48 year old. Right. So like, what if I.
27:44
Yes, you could go to your sibling's child because the mitochondria is passed maternally. Yeah. So it's in the egg cell. So it's the mother's mitochondria. So if you go down in the mother's line maternally, if you have a sister who has a kid, they're going to have very young mitochondria. You can take a little blood sample and then grow their mitochondria extensively and use that as a biological match.
27:50
To you, this is a perfect extension. I've had a blood boy as a son.
28:11
Yeah.
28:16
So now I'm just going to go to the extended family and be like, guys, it's a. It's a family project.
28:16
Yeah, family project. Yeah, exactly.
28:20
Yeah.
28:22
Well, that one's super interesting.
28:23
And we also have one that we're doing I've. I'm now building.
28:24
Sorry, are you going to do your own mitochondrial transplantation? You're going to build a bioreactor or are you using. Working with one of the third parties
28:27
that are a third company. Yeah. So I'll get. I will do a blood draw in the next week or two. They'll spin up and then they'll do it. Yeah, I'll do it.
28:32
Okay.
28:38
Yep.
28:38
So you're going to get your mitochondria, which have some. You know, the problem with mitochondria, as you know, is mitochondrial DNA degradation over time. Right. It accelerates for certain people. But that way, if you go back to a young person, you have young mitochondria, then you're going to multiply yours out.
28:39
Yes.
28:54
And probably select a little bit or healthier ones. Right. Okay. And then put it back in.
28:54
It's very, I mean, explorative. We don't know. We're one of the first. They're. They're in phase two now.
28:59
Do you sprint?
29:04
Yeah, I do.
29:05
So you could probably score if you did it intramuscular, like mitochondrial therapy. You could sprint your score.
29:06
That's a great idea.
29:11
Yeah. Thank you. Yeah, yeah. That would be a great way to measure it from a. Rather than just a basic biomarker perspective. Be really interesting to see.
29:12
Yeah. Sprinting is one of the most underappreciated longevity therapies.
29:20
Yeah. I don't do it.
29:23
Oh man.
29:24
I've got the. The age of a 74 year old, roughly. I am. I'm definitely not keeping track with you. Would you consider or have you looked at any plasmids where you take a gene as DNA, put it in your body and then that gene makes a protein in your body that does something
29:25
like the one we were looking at in the foxhol 3 expression? Yeah, exactly. So the mesenchymal stem cells packaged up with the Foxyl 3 delivery. That showed that over 50% of tissues getting that rejuvenation.
29:44
It's unbelievable.
29:54
Unbelievable. It's the best demonstration in the entire world.
29:55
It's perfect for tissue regeneration as a particular application set. Tissue regeneration using that sort of system seems like a no brainer.
29:58
It's like. Yeah, it's safe, right? Yeah. So I reached out to that Chinese professor. I'm really interested in seeing it replicating. I would love.
30:05
You reached out to the Chinese professor? Yeah, it's awesome. We sent that paper back and forth. That's awesome. Did he respond? Yeah, awesome. Yeah.
30:12
Good. So I'd love to do that. I'd love to actually build it ourselves. But that's like a two year project. So AI can help make it faster. That's true.
30:21
Yeah. AI as a project manager for these sorts of programs is, you know. That's true.
30:31
We spoke about this six months ago.
30:35
Yeah. And things are so different.
30:37
So different now. Six months later and in terms of standing up. So that was cool. So I think that's a good option Then also I'm doing Brian Johnson organoids. So we took my IPSCs.
30:38
We now have induced pluripotent stem cells. So you took your cells, turned them into stem cells?
30:48
Yep.
30:53
Yeah.
30:53
So now we're doing in dish. So now we have like a Brian Johnson heart, liver, lungs. And now we're gonna try molecules on me and in.
30:53
So you've applied. So let me just walk the Audience through this. So you take cells off of your skin or something. Blood, and then you put these Yamanaka factor proteins on those cells, causes those cells to become stem cells, which means they can then turn into any other cell. And then you put other proteins on them to turn them into a heart cell or a eye cell or what have you. And now you've got a store of these tissue specific Brian Johnson cells.
31:00
Yes.
31:23
That you then used for like, you
31:24
can say, okay, what if you get Brian Johnson blank your drug? What is, what happens? Is it good, is it bad? What are the side effects in the petri dish?
31:25
You put the drug in there.
31:34
Exactly.
31:35
See what happens. Yeah. Okay.
31:35
So you, like, you can simulate all these experiments. So now you, you get the advantage of time, of acceleration of like, what to take. Why, what dose?
31:36
That's awesome.
31:43
What Combatorial things to consider.
31:43
Yeah.
31:45
And so we, we have the organoids stood up. We haven't done our first takes yet.
31:46
Yeah.
31:48
So that's interesting because now I have to do this old school methodology, like put it in my body, wait to see what happens. Is it good, is it bad? What, you know, how does it affect everything else?
31:49
Yeah, totally.
31:58
That's a good one. But I mean, I don't know. We'll see it. It's cool in concept. I mean, tbd, if it actually works.
31:59
So have you tracked any of the alternatives to Yamanaka Factors? The factor discovery work that's going on and do you think there's anything worth testing at this stage?
32:04
Yeah, I'm an investor in New Limit, so I've talked to them about where they're at. And Blake and Brian's company, they've done, I mean, they've made remarkable progress. Yeah, they. They figured out how to computationally solve the discovery process.
32:13
Yeah.
32:27
And so they, they're much faster than they initially thought. And so that's very encouraging.
32:27
You know, the big challenge with Yamanaka factors is always dosing. If you overdose a cell, a one cell, that cell can become a cancer cell and take off as a tumor.
32:31
Yeah.
32:41
So the sensitivity that you need to have to get the right number of the factors, which is a protein into the cell needs to be perfectly tuned. So I have a theory that this will end up being solved by cellular switches that will end up putting machinery into the cells that can turn on or off the protein synthesis at the right dosing based on the measurement of gene expression in the cell. That's my theory on where this will end up.
32:41
That makes a lot of sense. Any other Control mechanism will be inadequate. That's right, the feedback loop.
33:06
Just all you need is one error and you're, you're, you're in trouble. Yeah, but it is, it is the most profound, I think, technology that humanity is dealing with today besides AI, we're not quite there with fusion, which I would argue is probably a distant third, but it is very powerful.
33:10
What's possible and in the future, like I think we'll look back and we'll see GLP1s as the first big drop.
33:22
Yeah.
33:28
Of like what I can just inject myself and like it solves hunger and totally, you know. And then the second will probably be something like new limit or one of these Fox, one of these plasma based Fox 3 therapies where it will show real life like dramatic changes and then humanity will shift as like longevity being a vision of sci fi, you know, rich people pursuit to like something that is truly go back to like the conversation on, on the temptation towards socialism. Right. Like if, if you can feel robust in your ability to pursue life and be healthy and vibrant and in control, I think these things would have dramatic changes to society. Not just in health, but like, well,
33:28
any form of abundance, whether it's abundance in food, in energy, in housing, in mobility, in lifespan. The more abundance people get, the happier they are. Yes. And the more you're improving abundance in the world, the better we are going to live as a group of people together on planet Earth. The happier we will all be with each other.
34:09
I think, like, honestly, like a lot
34:27
of the external conflict only comes from internal unhappiness.
34:29
100%. So if you look at the general malaise of like American society, like, no wonder things are shitty, right? Like you've got meta. 84% of people have metabolic disorder. Over 40% of people are obese. Like, we're just in really poor health. Nobody's sleeping, everyone's on their phone. Like we have mental health issues. Like, no wonder you have the proclivity towards these kinds of outcomes. Like, so if you could get the health in check, it changes the psychological disposition of you, your community, your country. Like you have much more of a can do attitude. Like, I can take on the world and I can do hard things. But when you're not feeling well, like it's just everything is just so much harder.
34:32
Yeah, 100%. And so in light of all of these new therapeutic modalities and these new opportunities that seem to be biologically proven and have these profound effects, why continue to tinker with psychedelics? Like are they as Profound or are they a compliment or like how do you think about fitting all of this portfolio of things that you're looking at together?
35:06
Yeah, I mean, I guess the question is, I Forget on the foxhole 3 study, I don't know if they saw brain rejuvenation.
35:24
Didn't see that. I did not see that. And I don't, I don't remember. I mean it is a very complicated organ.
35:29
Yeah, exactly.
35:35
And it's insane.
35:36
It's very hard to reach.
35:37
You know you can grow muscle tissue back and you can grow skin tissue back and it's kind of like, okay, I grew a little. Like if you grow the neurons back maybe in the wrong way, like we don't know.
35:38
Yeah.
35:49
Because it's never been done before. Yeah. So understanding the consequence of neuroregeneration as
35:50
like so I wonder if the role it might Play. Maybe psilocybin and 5 Meo won't be meaningful for basic functions of the body, but maybe it's the outperformer in youthfulness of your disposition towards reality. One thing I'm apprehensive about is I'm 48. And so as you start climbing to your 50s, 60s, you do really narrow, like your ambition goes from I can do anything to start, you know, narrowing down further and further. And I worry about using, losing a youthful disposition of a can do attitude of anything is possible.
35:56
Totally.
36:40
And maybe that's the role of psychedelics is you just get a wash of like the snapback of like I can and I can bounce. Yeah, that definitely been the case for me. So I think they do probably play a really important role of like they're probably a set of things that for certain people that will basically like. I mean I felt like it was like 30, 40 years of psychological rejuvenation. You know, it's like to transport me back to a childlike state.
36:40
Yeah.
37:10
That is insane. I don't get that from the sauna or from eating well or from sleeping well. Like I'm still.
37:10
Right.
37:15
So it's just unique.
37:16
Yeah. Amazing. Well, listen, I'm going to go drink alcohol and eat carbs and stay out late. I don't know. What are you going to do?
37:18
Yeah, I'm going to go to bed on time. Yeah. Doing my wind down routine.
37:24
Yeah, you do you, yeah. You as well. Enjoy it. I appreciate it. This has been great. Brian Johnson. Thank you.
37:28
Thanks.
37:34
Yeah, that was awesome.
37:34
That was great.
37:35