Intermittent
fasting has proven benefits for metabolic health, but a new study shows that it
could slow hair growth—at least in mice. Researchers report December 13 in the
Cell Press journal Cell that
mice subjected to intermittent fasting regimes showed improved metabolic health
but slower hair regeneration compared to mice with 24/7 access to food. A
similar process might occur in humans, based on a small clinical trial that the
team also conducted, but it’s likely to be less severe since humans have a much
slower metabolic rate and different hair growth patterns compared to mice.
“We don’t want to scare people away from
practicing intermittent fasting because it is associated with a lot of
beneficial effects—it’s just important to be aware that it might have some
unintended effects,” says senior author and stem cell biologist Bing Zhang (@bingzhang_lab) of Westlake University in Zhejiang, China.
In addition to its metabolic benefits,
previous studies have shown that fasting can improve the stress resistance of
stem cells associated with blood, intestinal, and muscle tissue, but little is
known about how it impacts peripheral tissues such as skin and hair. Zhang’s
team hypothesized that fasting might also be beneficial for skin tissue
regeneration, the process by which old and damaged cells are replaced.
To test this, they examined hair
regrowth in mice that were shaved and then subjected to different intermittent
fasting regimes. Some mice were fed on a time-restricted feeding (TRF) schedule
that involved 8 hours of food access and 16 hours of fasting each day, while
other mice were subjected to alternate-day feeding (ADF).
They were surprised to find that fasting
inhibited hair regeneration. While control mice that had unlimited access to
food had regrown most of their hair after 30 days, mice on both intermittent
fasting regimes showed only partial hair regrowth after 96 days.
The team showed that this inhibited hair
growth occurs because hair follicle stem cells (HFSCs) are unable to cope with
the oxidative stress associated with switching from using glucose to fat. HFSCs
go through phases of activity and dormancy, and hair regrowth depends on these
cells becoming active. While the control mice’s HFSCs began to become activated
around day 20 post-shaving and remained active until their hair had regrown,
the intermittent fasting mice’s activated HFSCs underwent apoptosis (programmed
cell death) during extended fasting periods.
Using genetic engineering methods, the
team showed that this fasting-induced apoptosis was driven by an increased
concentration of free fatty acids near the hair follicles, which caused a
build-up of harmful radical oxygen species within the HFSCs. Free fatty acids
also caused human HFSCs to undergo apoptosis in vitro.
“During fasting, adipose tissue starts
to release free fatty acids, and these fatty acids enter the HFSCs that were
recently activated, but these stem cells don’t have the right machinery to use
them,” says Zhang.
In comparison, epidermal stem cells,
which are responsible for maintaining the epidermal skin barrier, were
unaffected by intermittent fasting. The major difference between these stem
cell types is that epidermal stem cells have a higher antioxidant capacity.
When the team tested whether antioxidants could mitigate the effects of fasting
on hair growth, they showed that both topical application of vitamin E and
genetic upregulation of antioxidant capacity helped HFSCs survive fasting.
The team also conducted a small clinical
trial with 49 healthy young adults to examine whether fasting similarly affects
hair regrowth in humans. They showed that a time-restricted diet involving 18
hours of fasting per day reduced the average speed of hair growth by 18%
compared to controls, but larger studies would be needed to verify this effect
given the study’s small sample size and short duration (10 days).
“The human population is very
heterogeneous, so the effects might be different for different people,” says
Zhang. “Mice also have a very high metabolic rate compared with humans, so
fasting and metabolic switching have a more severe effect on mouse HFSCs. We
see a milder effect in humans—there are still apoptotic stem cells, but many
HFSCs survive. So, there is still hair regrowth; it’s just a little bit slower
than usual.”
In future work, the researchers plan to
collaborate with local hospitals to investigate how fasting impacts other types
of stem cells in the skin and other body systems.
“We plan to examine how this process
affects the regeneration activities in other tissues,” says Zhang. “We also
want to figure out how fasting impacts skin wound healing and identify
metabolites that could help the survival of HFSCs and promote hair growth
during fasting.”
Source: https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1067106
Journal article: https://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(24)01311-4
Source: Intermittent
fasting inhibits hair regeneration in mice – Scents of Science
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