The Human Upgrade: Biohacking for Longevity & Performance

The Nobel Prize Molecule That Nearly Doubles Lifespan : 1407

47 snips
Jan 30, 2026
Chris Burres, founder and chief scientist of MyVitalC and an early C60 manufacturer, explains the Nobel Prize molecule that reshaped longevity research. He traces its surprising 90% lifespan result in rats, how stable manufacturing made human use possible, and how C60 interacts with mitochondria, sleep, oxidative stress, and athletic recovery. Short timelines for focus, sleep, and systemic effects are discussed.
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INSIGHT

C60’s Origins And Early Manufacturing

  • C60 (buckminsterfullerene) is a stable spherical carbon molecule discovered in 1985 and linked to major material and biological effects.
  • Chris Burres' company manufactured C60 commercially since 1991 and supplied research groups before health use emerged.
INSIGHT

Record Longevity Result In Rats

  • A peer-reviewed study showed C60 extended Wistar rat lifespan by ~90% versus controls.
  • The molecule also increased resilience to oxidative liver injury in treated rats.
ADVICE

Test C60 Over A Three-Month Protocol

  • Try C60 for an experimental 3-month run: expect energy and focus first, sleep improvements by month two, and systemic changes by month three.
  • Track objective metrics like sleep scores and inflammation markers to evaluate effects.
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