Temporal linkage between the phenotypic and genomic responses to caloric restriction

被引:198
作者
Dhahbi, JM
Kim, HJ
Mote, PL
Beaver, RJ
Spindler, SR [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Biochem, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
[2] BioMarker Pharmaceut Inc, Campbell, CA 95008 USA
[3] Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Stat, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0305300101
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Caloric restriction (CR), the consumption of fewer calories while avoiding malnutrition, decelerates the rate of aging and the development of age-related diseases. CR has been viewed as less effective in older animals and as acting incrementally to slow or prevent age-related changes in gene expression. Here we demonstrate that CR initiated in 19-month-old mice begins within 2 months to increase the mean time to death by 42% and increase mean and maximum lifespans by 4.7 (P = 0.000017) and 6.0 months (P = 0.000056), respectively. The rate of age-associated mortality was decreased 3.1-fold. Between the first and second breakpoints in the CR survival curve (between 21 and 31 months of age), tumors as a cause of death decreased from 80% to 67% (P = 0.012). Genome-wide microarray analysis of hepatic RNA from old control mice switched to CR for 2, 4, and 8 weeks showed a rapid and progressive shift toward the gene expression profile produced by long-term CR. This shift took place in the time frame required to induce the health and longevity effects of CR. Shifting from long-term CR to a control diet, which returns animals to the control rate of aging, reversed 90% of the gene expression effects of long-term CR within 8 weeks. These results suggest a cause-and-effect relationship between the rate of aging and the CR-associated gene expression biomarkers. Therefore, therapeutics mimicking the gene-expression biomarkers of CR may reproduce its physiological effects.
引用
收藏
页码:5524 / 5529
页数:6
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [1] *AFF, 2001, 1 AFF 701097
  • [2] Dwarf mice and the ageing process
    BrownBorg, HM
    Borg, KE
    Meliska, CJ
    Bartke, A
    [J]. NATURE, 1996, 384 (6604) : 33 - 33
  • [3] Genomic profiling of short- and long-term caloric restriction effects in the liver of aging mice
    Cao, SX
    Dhahbi, JM
    Mote, PL
    Spindler, SR
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2001, 98 (19) : 10630 - 10635
  • [4] SURVIVAL AND DISEASE PATTERNS IN C57BL-6J MICE SUBJECTED TO UNDERNUTRITION
    CHENEY, KE
    LIU, RK
    SMITH, GS
    LEUNG, RE
    MICKEY, MR
    WALFORD, RL
    [J]. EXPERIMENTAL GERONTOLOGY, 1980, 15 (04) : 237 - 258
  • [5] The interplay of glutathione-related processes in antioxidant defense
    Cnubben, NHP
    Rietjens, IMCM
    Wortelboer, H
    van Zanden, J
    van Bladeren, PJ
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY, 2001, 10 (04) : 141 - 152
  • [6] Assessment of growth parameters and life span of GHR/BP gene-disrupted mice
    Coschigano, KT
    Clemmons, D
    Bellush, LL
    Kopchick, JJ
    [J]. ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2000, 141 (07) : 2608 - 2613
  • [7] Calories and aging alter gene expression for gluconeogenic, glycolytic, and nitrogen-metabolizing enzymes
    Dhahbi, JM
    Mote, PL
    Wingo, J
    Tillman, JB
    Walford, RL
    Spindler, SR
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM, 1999, 277 (02): : E352 - E360
  • [8] Postprandial induction of chaperone gene expression is rapid in mice
    Dhahbi, JM
    Cao, SX
    Mote, PL
    Rowley, BC
    Wingo, JE
    Spindler, SR
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 2002, 132 (01) : 31 - 37
  • [9] Dietary energy tissue specifically regulates endoplasmic reticulum chaperone gene expression in the liver of mice
    Dhahbi, JM
    Mote, PL
    Tillman, JB
    Walford, RL
    Spindler, SR
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 1997, 127 (09) : 1758 - 1764
  • [10] Caloric restriction alters the feeding response of key metabolic enzyme genes
    Dhahbi, JM
    Mote, PL
    Wingo, J
    Rowley, BC
    Cao, SX
    Walford, RL
    Spindler, SR
    [J]. MECHANISMS OF AGEING AND DEVELOPMENT, 2001, 122 (10) : 1033 - 1048