Title: Aging: What causes it What slows it
1Aging What causes it?What slows it?
2First experiments
- Osborne, Mendel, Ferry 1917
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4Osborne, Mendel, Ferry 1917
- First scientific experiment suggesting that
caloric restriction could extend lifespan - During experiments on nutrition, selected rats
were fed a calorie restricted diet ("stunted")
over various period of time. - Normally-fed rats mortality rate (91 rats total)
- 17 (19) lt 1yr.
- 48 (53) lt 2 yrs.
- 26 (29) gt 2 yrs.
5Four calorie restricted females
- More than 2/3 of stock rats die within 2 yrs.
- All 4 stunted females lived longer than 2 years.
- All four were breeding at a time when rats are
typically in menopause. - They produced from 3 to 6 litters all as
vigorous as offspring from younger mothers. - Sample size (4 rats) was insufficient to give a
statistically significant demonstration.
6- Osborne knew he couldnt make any firm
conclusions from an experiment with only four
rats. But he thought the observation was
interesting and published it in the journal
Science (which Thomas Edison had founded a few
years earlier). In that Science article Osborne
said, it appears as if the preliminary stunting
period lengthened the total span of their life. - That same year, J. Northrop showed that he could
extend the lifespan of fruit flies when he
restricted their food intake during the larval
stage.
7Caloric restriction results replicated in other
species
8Spider life span
- Normal diet average 50 days maximum 100 days
- Caloric restriction average 90 days maximum
139 days
9Single cell organism lifespan
- Normal diet average 7 days maximum 14 days
- Caloric restriction average 13 days maximum
25 days
10Guppy life span
- Normal diet average 33 months maximum 54
months - Caloric restriction average 46 months maximum
59 months
11Rat lifespan
- Normal diet average 23 months maximum 33
months - Caloric restriction average 33 months maximum
47 months
12Calorie Restriction in Rhesus Monkeys
- Mattison, Lane, Roth, Ingram
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15Methods
- Typical average life span of rhesus macaques
estimated at 25 years. - In 1987 National Institute on Aging began study
of 30 CR in male and female rhesus macaques of
1-17 years of age. - Range of ages allowed assessment of CR on various
age groups. - Number of animals was eventually 60 of each sex.
16CR effect on rhesus lifespan and disease
- Preliminary mortality data are not yet
statistically significant, but indicate that
mortality to date is lower in CR animals (15)
than in controls (24). - The CR group has lower incidence of chronic
diseases including cancer, cardiovascular
disease, diabetes, endometriosis, fibrosis,
amyloidosis, ulcers, cataracts and kidney failure.
17CR lowers abdominal fat
18Biomarkers
- A biomarker for aging is a measurement that
predicts survival. - Could help to reduce cost and time involved in
evaluation of anti-aging interventions. - There is debate over what constitutes a marker
and how it should be evaluated. - That aside, the following are some candidates.
19Body temperature
- CR over 6 years reduced colonic body temperature
about 0.5 Celsius. - This agrees with rodent studies.
- Is consistent across age range of 7-13 years.
- Additional test using implanted thermometers
using radio telemetry for 24 hr monitoring. - Temperature decreased as food intake reduced.
- At 30 restriction, temp was significantly
(plt0.003) lower than controls group. - Circadian patterns were maintained.
20CR lowers body temperature
21DHEA
- Precursor of testosterone and estrogen.
- Elevated DHEA associated with protection function
in aging diseases, diabetes, heart disease and
cancer. - Peak levels in humans occur at about 20 years of
age in men and women. - In 792 normal rhesus monkeys, DHEA levels dropped
90 from infancy to 3 years followed by an
average decline of 4.2 per yr
22DHEA steroid normally declines with age
23DHEA down 3 in CR males vs 30 for controls
24Reproduction
- Juveniles Reproductive maturation delayed in
prepubescent monkeys on CR early in life. - Adult males Testosterone level changes delayed
by at least one year. - Adult females Little difference in CR vs non-CR
monkeys.
25Blood sugar, insulin
- CR monkeys able to regulate glucose better than
controls. - Lower fasting glucose and insulin levels after 3
years. - During intravenous glucose tolerance tests, max
glucose level in CR less than in Control. - Possible that CR increases insulin sensitivity
and may postpone type II diabetes.
26- CR may alter basic mechanism of fuel use.
- Short term CR reduced fasting and peak insulin
level prior to changes in adiposity. - CR induced changes in lean (lt22 fat) monkeys.
- Suggests CR affects insulin levels independent of
body weight and fat levels.
27Activity
- Monitored locomotor activity and basic behavior
patterns in males after 6 yrs of CR. - Used ultra-sonic motion detectors and video.
- Found daily activities and behaviors typical for
captive primates. - CR males displayed more pacing, gross movement
and less passivity than control. - CR female juveniles (6-8yrs) less active than
control.
28Biomarkers of caloric restriction may predict
longevity in humans
29- Caloric restriction (CR) slows aging and
maintains health and function in a diverse array
of species ranging from worms and flies to
rodents.
30- Rhesus monkey data showed that two
highly-reproducible biomarkers of CR in rodents,
reduced body temperature and reduced plasma
insulin, also occur in CR rhesus monkeys. - Serum DHEAS levels decline in aging monkeys and
humans. CR also slows the rate of decline of
DHEAS in CR monkeys.
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32- Do body temperature, plasma insulin, and DHEAS
predict human longevity?
33Methods
- The authors studied data from the Baltimore
Longitudinal Study of Aging in Male Humans
(BLSA). - Obtained records of subjects body temperature,
plasma insulin, and DHEAS, - Divided the subjects into those in the upper half
or those in the lower half of measurements of
each biomarker. - Compared survival of men in each group.
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35Results
- Significant longer survival in men with lower
body temperature, lower plasma insulin, and
higher DHEAS (Figure 1) (p lt 0.05). - The environmental or genetic factors that cause
CR-like effects on body temperature, plasma
insulin, and DHEAS in these men appear to be
related to longevity. - Suggest that the same mechanisms that control
aging in animals are likely at work in humans,
and that modifying these mechanisms may extend
lifespan in humans.
36Demography of Dietary Restriction and Death in
Drosophila
- Mair, Goymer, Pletcher, Partridge
37- Mortality rate the probability of dying in any
given interval, given the animal is alive at the
start of the interval - Hypothesis CR begun at any stage of life reduces
the mortality rate to that of animals on lifetime
CR
38Methods
- Four groups of flies
- CR for life
- Fully fed for life
- Fully fed, then switched to CR
- CR, then switched to fully fed
39Mortality in fully-fed switched to CR
40Mortality in CR to switched fully-fed
41Results
- Two days after starting CR for the first time,
and at various ages, fully fed flies are no more
likely to die than flies of the same age who have
experienced long-term CR. - Switching from CR to fully fed resulted in rapid
increase of mortality levels. CR animals who
switch to fully-fed have the same mortality rate
as long-term fully fed flies.
42Conclusion
- It doesnt matter when CR is started. Switching
to CR late in life reduces mortality to the same
rate as long-term CR.
43Gene Expression Profiling of Aging Using DNA
Microarrays
- Weindruch, Kayo, Lee, Prolla
44DNA microarrays
- A tool that lets us measure biological age on a
tissue specific basis. - Allow evaluation of interventions at the
molecular level. - Allow study of 10,000 genes within a single
experimental set-up.
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46Gene expression in old vs young mouse (muscle
sample)
47Methods
- mice 30 months old housed individually
- fed non purified diet and acidified water AL for
1week, then split into 2 groups - Control mice fed 84kcal/week, about 20 less than
standard diet - necessary to avoid obesity and maintain motor
activity - CR mice fed 62kcal/week
- food enriched with protein, vitamins and minerals
to match Control diet for nutrition
48Results
- 6347 genes surveyed
- 58 (0.9) displayed greater than 2-fold increase
in gene expression - 55 (0.9) displayed greater then 2-fold decrease
in expression
49Gene groups affected
- Stress responses (including compensatory response
to increased free radicals) - Motor neuron genes
- Metabolism genes