John's Discussion on Rapamycin

www.youtube.com/watch?v=oFmsMaTmBaY&t=2800

some people have a hyperinflammatory response to foreign DNA/RNA (activated STING pathway)
gain of function in TORC1 causing hyperinflammation
steroids and Treg lymphocytes turn off hyperinflammatory immune system
rapamycin massively upregulates Treg lymphocytes
Treg is a TORC2 cell
totally healthy, very rich, high IQ are taking rapamycin off label and TORC2 upregulated
in order to have a high IQ you have to have an upregulated TORC2
4mg rapamycin per day for graft vs host disease
rheumotology world is funded by expensive biologics, so they're not taking up rapamycin as fast as they could
says the FDA model is on it's way out for small molecule therapies. uses AI to find therapies for patients.
chronic inhibition of mTORC1 (from high dose daily rapamycin) leads to indirect effects to mTORC2 (causing side effects)
PI3K mice interfering RNA for TORC2, treats autism and epilepsy.
mTORC2 inhibititors: lithium, high dose tamoxifen (PKC inhibitor)
rapamycin can treat some depression
synuclein is a predictor for alcoholism
T cell response was so good, there wasn't enough innate immune activation to drive B cell antibody maturation
If your innate immune system and T cells are cooking with gas, antibody testing is probably irrelevant
people that never get sick, their immune system is perfectly tuned.
rapamycin can clean out bad eggs to leave good ones for pregnancy
eggs are full of mitochondria
one patient took rapamycin and their endometriosis was fixed
anesthesics (like xenon) work by effecting polarization of electron flow in mTORC1
anesthesic long term side effect is mitochondrial unfolded protein response