Methodology for testing the efficacy of functional botanical ingredients for support of stem cell surveillance and mitochondrial resilience. A preliminary randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, acute clinical proof-of-concept trial

Authors

  • Gitte S. Jensen
  • Krista Sanchez
  • Dina Cruickshank
  • Christine Fields

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31989/ffs.v6i1.1882

Abstract

Background: Natural compounds are increasingly recognized for their ability to support regenerative health and counteract age-related decline through modulation of stem cell activity and mitochondrial function.  

Objective: This clinical proof-of-concept study evaluated the acute effects of four functional ingredients – Ginseng extract (from Panax ginseng), Olive extract (from Olea europaea), Chaga mushroom extract (from Inonotus Obliquus), and potassium hydrogen glucarate – using methods to document rapid changes in stem cells numbers and mitochondrial resilience in healthy adults.   

Methods: Using a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over design, four healthy participants were enrolled following IRB-approved informed consent and consumed each ingredient or placebo on five separate days at least one week apart.  Each participant was scheduled at the same time of the morning for all visits to minimize circadian influences. Results from the visit where placebo was consumed allowed data collection on that person’s normal circadian changes at that time, so this could be accounted for in the data analysis.  Blood samples were collected at baseline, 1, 2, and 3 hours post-consumption.  Stem cell numbers were quantified by flow cytometry.  Mitochondrial volume and membrane potential were assessed ex vivo under oxidative and inflammatory stress using reporter dyes and flow cytometry.  

Results: All ingredients induced rapid, ingredient-specific mobilization of distinct stem cell types, with Chaga extract and Olive extract demonstrated robust effects across multiple stem cell types.  All functional ingredients increased circulating pluripotential stem cells at 1 hour by at least 10% above levels observed after placebo consumption. Chaga intake resulted in an average 36% increase in endothelial stem cells compared to placebo.  All ingredients modulated stress-induced changes in mitochondrial volume and membrane potential, with Ginseng extract and Olive extract showing particularly pronounced effects on mitochondrial adaptability.

Novelty of the Study: This proof-of-concept clinical study presents novel evidence of acute biological effects following consumption of functional food extracts, with measureable changes in stem cell surveillance and mitochondrial stress responses observed as early as 1 hour after a single dose compared to placebo.  

Conclusion: These preliminary findings demonstrate rapid bioactivity of the tested functional ingredients in modulating regenerative and stress-response pathways, supporting their potential as early-phase interventions for promoting cellular resilience.  The results further support the use of assessing mitochondrial resilience ex vivo as part of clinical evaluation of acute effects of functional ingredients.  

Keywords: Cellular resilience; Chaga mushroom; flow cytometry; mitochondrial volume; mito-chondrial membrane potential, olive extract; oxidative stress; Panax ginseng; polyphenols; pluripotential; potassium glucarate; progenitor; stem cell mobilization; stress response.

Published

2026-01-19

Issue

Section

Research Articles