Great article. But I couldn't help laughing out loud at its egregious grammatical mistake:
"The team, led by University of Leicester translational cancer research expert Professor Karen Brown, administered resveratrol sulfate to mice models."
Resveratrol was administered to the mice and not to the model, that is to the conceptual scheme Prof. Brown used to test her hypothesis. Most reasonably educated readers expect a fairly concrete direct object after a transitive verb such as "administer". Thus, what the sentence evokes is a troupe of IV'ed mice sashaying down a Paris fashion runway.

 In two recently published human clinical trials done by respected medical schools it was shown that transmax resveratrol in the first study, and bioforte resveratrol in the second one, had the effect of reducing blood glucose, improving insulin sensitivity, lowering blood pressure and LDL cholesterol, and even lowering body weight.  The scientist who did the transmax study stated, "Resveratrol can be an effective adjunct therapy for type 2 Diabetics currently using one of the Metformin like drugs, or who are controlling their Diabetes without drugs."