9 research outputs found
Senescence in natural populations of animals:Widespread evidence and its implications for bio-gerontology
That senescence is rarely, if ever, observed in natural populations is an oft-quoted fallacy within bio-gerontology. We identify the roots of this fallacy in the otherwise seminal works of Medawar and Comfort, and explain that under antagonistic pleiotropy or disposable soma explanations for the evolution of senescence there is no reason why senescence cannot evolve to be manifest within the life expectancies of wild organisms. The recent emergence of long-term field studies presents irrefutable evidence that senescence is commonly detected in nature. We found such evidence in 175 different animal species from 340 separate studies. Although the bulk of this evidence comes from birds and mammals, we also found evidence for senescence in other vertebrates and insects. We describe how high-quality longitudinal field data allow us to test evolutionary explanations for differences in senescence between the sexes and among traits and individuals. Recent studies indicate that genes, prior environment and investment in growth and reproduction influence aging rates in the wild. We argue that – with the fallacy that wild animals do not senesce finally dead and buried – collaborations between bio-gerontologists and field biologists can begin to test the ecological generality of purportedly ‘public’ mechanisms regulating aging in laboratory models
Altered growth characteristics of skin fibroblasts from wild-derived mice, and genetic loci regulating fibroblast clone size
Mouse fibroblast senescence in vitro is an important model for the study of aging at cellular level. However, common laboratory mouse strains may have lost some important allele variations related to aging processes. In this study, growth in vitro of tail skin fibroblasts (TSFs) derived from a wild-derived stock, Pohnpei (Pohn) mice, differed from growth of control C57BL/6 J (B6) TSFs. Pohn TSFs exhibited higher proliferative ability, fewer apoptotic cells, decreased expression of Cip1 , smaller surface areas, fewer cells positive for senescence associated-β-galactosidase (SA-β-gal) and greater resistance to H 2 O 2 -induced SA-β-gal staining and Cip1 expression. These data suggest that TSFs from Pohn mice resist cellular senescence-like changes. Using large clone ratio (LCR) as the phenotype, a quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis in a Pohn/B6 backcross population found four QTLs for LCR: Fcs1 on Chr 3 at 55 cm; Fcs2 on Chr X at 50 cm; Fcs3 on Chr 4 at 51 cm and Fcs4 on Chr 10 at 25 cm. Together, these four QTLs explain 26.1% of the variations in LCRs in the N2 population. These are the first QTLs reported that regulate fibroblast growth. Glutathione S transferase mu ( GST-mu ) genes are overrepresented in the 95% confidence interval of Fcs1 , and Pohn TSFs have higher H 2 O 2 -induced GST-mu 4 , 5 and 7 mRNA levels than B6 TSFs. These enzymes may protect Pohn TSFs from oxidation.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71416/1/j.1474-9726.2006.00208.x.pd
Recommended from our members
Enhanced Protein Homeostasis Mechanisms in Naked Mole Rats Cells
Phylogenic studies suggest that cells from long-lived species are more resistant to a variety of stressors than short-lived species. However, there is little information on the cellular mechanisms that give rise to increased resistance to stress. Our previous studies have shown that liver proteins from a long-lived species have lower levels of protein ubiquitination which is associated with increased proteasome activity, suggesting that mechanisms of protein quality control could play a critical role in assuring longevity of long-lived species. In this study, we evaluated whether autophagy and heat shock chaperones proteins (HSPs) are associated with longevity in rodents using skin fibroblasts isolated from mice and naked mole rats (NMR); two species that are similar in body size but differ almost 10 fold in longevity. Our results indicate that macroautophagy induced by serum-starvation is significantly enhanced in NMR compared to mouse which correlates with an inhibition of the mTOR pathway and increased LC3 conversion. We also found that several HSPs (e.g., Hsp90, Hsp70, Hsp40, Hsp 27) were significantly higher at both basal and after heat shock conditions. These observations suggest that NMR, a long-lived species, has increased mechanisms to ensure protein quality (autophagy and HSPs) and support the idea that protein homeostasis could play an important role in promoting longevity
Recommended from our members
DOH-2013-Harrison.pptx
Phylogenic studies suggest that cells from long-lived species are more resistant to a variety of stressors than short-lived species. However, there is little information on the cellular mechanisms that give rise to increased resistance to stress. Our previous studies have shown that liver proteins from a long-lived species have lower levels of protein ubiquitination which is associated with increased proteasome activity, suggesting that mechanisms of protein quality control could play a critical role in assuring longevity of long-lived species. In this study, we evaluated whether autophagy and heat shock chaperones proteins (HSPs) are associated with longevity in rodents using skin fibroblasts isolated from mice and naked mole rats (NMR); two species that are similar in body size but differ almost 10 fold in longevity. Our results indicate that macroautophagy induced by serum-starvation is significantly enhanced in NMR compared to mouse which correlates with an inhibition of the mTOR pathway and increased LC3 conversion. We also found that several HSPs (e.g., Hsp90, Hsp70, Hsp40, Hsp 27) were significantly higher at both basal and after heat shock conditions. These observations suggest that NMR, a long-lived species, has increased mechanisms to ensure protein quality (autophagy and HSPs) and support the idea that protein homeostasis could play an important role in promoting longevity.Keywords: Longevity, Autophagy, Aging, Naked Mole Rats, Protein Homeostasis, Heat Shock Protein
Frameworks for Proof-of-Concept Clinical Trials of Interventions That Target Fundamental Aging Processes
Unsettling Standards: the biological age controversy
One key debate within the sociology of aging and the life course over the past decade has been focused on understanding the extent to which there has been a shift from a reliance on chronological age to segment the life course and ascertain age-specific norms, values, and expectations toward a destandardized life course in advanced economies. In this, little attention has been devoted to the infrastructural processes that would support such a transition: the technologies, standards, and conventions that would, in practice, equip a personalized, individualized management of the life course. This article focuses on one of such standards, “biological age” (BA), and the 40-year controversy around the method and purpose of its measurement. Drawing on published research and archival and interview data collected in Europe and North America, the article suggests that the persistent uncertainty surrounding BA measurements is structured by differing interlocking relationships between normative ideals of the life course and methodological approaches to knowledge making to understand and manage the relationship among aging, health, and illness. Understanding this controversy and the configuration of normative and epistemic conventions that underpin its dynamic provides a unique lens on the complex interweaving relationship between expertise, scientific and technological standards, and social, normatively embedded age identities in contemporary societies