Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Hungering for Longevity----Scientists
Identify the Confluence of Aging Signals
Newswise, February 22, 2011 — LA JOLLA,
CA----Substantial evidence suggests that
lifespan is increased if an organism
restricts its daily calorie intake, a
spartan regime that some say works by just
making life seem longer.
A team of scientists from the Salk Institute
of Biological Studies has discovered a
molecular switch flipped by hunger that
could not only make longevity more
appetizing but identify drug targets for
patients with aging-related diseases such as
type II diabetes or cancer.
In the February 17, 2011 issue of Nature Howard
Hughes Medical Institute investigator Andrew
Dillin, Ph.D., an associate professor in the
Molecular and Cell Biology Laboratory, and
Howard Hughes Medical Institute early career
scientist Reuben Shaw, Ph.D., an assistant
professor in the Molecular and Cell Biology
Laboratory and the Dulbecco Laboratory for
Cancer Research, report for the first time
that deactivation of a protein called CRTC1
in roundworms increases their lifespan, most
likely mediating the effects of calorie
restriction.
Previously,
researchers knew hunger promoted longevity
by activating an enzyme called AMPK, which
senses that food is scarce and pushes cells
into a low energy state.
"We knew AMPK was a major energy sensor but
didn't know what it was talking to," says
Dillin, one of two senior authors of the
study. "Our goal was to understand the
genetic circuitry that registered that
response."
To define the
circuitry, Dillin, who studies aging using
the roundworm Ceanorhabditis elegans as a
model system, joined forces with Shaw, who
had a long-term interest in AMPK's role in
mammalian metabolism.
"It was clear that one pathway that
coordinated metabolism with growth in
response to nutrients was AMPK signaling,"
says Shaw. "Studies had also suggested that
AMPK might regulate lifespan in worms. What
was not known was what factors downstream of
AMPK mediated those effects."
Together they
searched the genome of Caenorhabditis
elegans for likely AMPK targets, and
identified one suspect encoding a protein
called CRTC1, which was expressed at the
same time and place as AMPK.
To determine
if CRTC1 played any role in lifespan, the
team fed worms an inhibitory RNA engineered
to deplete them of CRTC1 protein. When they
measured the worms' lifespan-normally about
3 weeks-they found that worms fed the
anti-CRTC1 RNA lived a whopping 40% longer,
suggesting that AMPK retards aging by
antagonizing CRTC1 activity.
The group then
showed how AMPK silences CRTC1. AMPK is a
kinase, an enzyme that modifies the activity
of other proteins by decorating them with
chemical phosphate groups. The team found
that AMPK deactivated CRTC1 by adding
phosphates to a specific region of the CRTC1
protein, an effect equivalent to eliminating
CRTC1 altogether.
Likewise, when
the worms were fed an inhibitory RNA
depleting them of an enzyme that lops off
the CRTC1 phosphates, they lived longer,
showing that AMPK and the lopper-known to
scientists as calcineurin-determine lifespan
by controlling the extent to which CRTC1 is
phosphorylated.
In fact, Dillin's lab had previously
identified calcineurin as a regulator of
aging in an earlier study but they did not
know what calcineurin's key target was.
"What we have
identified is a binary switch that turns the
aging process on and off," says Dillin,
referring to the push-pull effects of AMPK
and calcineurin on CRTC1.
"Aging is a risk factor for a number of
pathological conditions-if you could find a
way to control this switch you could
ameliorate a plethora of age-related
diseases."
The good news
for the burger and fries crowd is that the
entire pathway----AMPK, calcineurin, and
CRTC1----and a host of interacting factors
may operate similarly in worms and humans.
In fact, one well-characterized protein
partner of CRTC1 is the gene regulator CREB.
The group found that worms lacking the worm
version of CREB lived longer, similar to
worms lacking CRTC1, suggesting that both
factors conspire to antagonize longevity.
"CREB is
involved in a suite of physiological
processes-from memory to drug addiction, to
energy homeostasis," says William Mair,
Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in the Dillin
lab and the study's first author.
"CRTC factors may regulate CREB's ability to
activate targets specifically involved in
aging."
Circumstantial
evidence already suggests that factors
downstream of AMPK impact aging-related
human diseases: both metformin, widely used
to treat type II diabetes, and age-retardant
resveratrol, red wine drinkers' best excuse
for having just one more glass, are
activated by AMPK.
"This pathway
is evolutionarily conserved
biochemically-that single phosphorylation
site on the CRTC1 protein, which is critical
for longevity in worms, is conserved as an
AMPK target site in CRTC1-like genes from
worms to mammals," says Shaw, suggesting
that inducing that site pharmacologically
was a goal worth going after.
This study also dovetails nicely with a
number of key studies on the function of the
CRTC family in mammals by Marc Montminy,
M.D., Ph.D, a professor in the Clayton
Foundation Laboratories for Peptide Biology
and a co-author on the current study.
"Whether you
are talking about yeast, worms, Labradors,
or rhesus monkeys-dietary restriction is the
best intervention we have so far against
age-related conditions like
neurodegeneration, cancer and diabetes,"
says Mair.
"Our goal now is to use information we have
derived from worm studies to find a way to
treat many of these diseases with one magic
bullet." With any luck, that magic bullet
will be maximally effective when taken on a
full stomach.
Other Salk
scientists contributing to this study were
Ianessa Morantte, a research assistant in
the Dillin lab, and Gerard Manning, Ph.D.,
and Ana Rodrigues, Ph.D., both in the Razavi-Newman
Center for Bioinformatics.
This study was
supported by the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, the American Federation for Aging
Research, the George E. Hewitt Foundation
for Medical Research, the Glenn Foundation
for Medical Research, and grants from the
National Institutes of Health.
For
information on the commercialization of this
technology, please contact Claudia Hetzer at
858-453-4100, x 1704 (chetzer@salk.edu)
in the Salk Office of Technology Management
and Development.
About the
Salk Institute for Biological Studies:
The Salk
Institute for Biological Studies is one of
the world's preeminent basic research
institutions, where internationally renowned
faculty probe fundamental life science
questions in a unique, collaborative, and
creative environment.
Focused both on discovery and on mentoring
future generations of researchers, Salk
scientists make groundbreaking contributions
to our understanding of cancer, aging,
Alzheimer's, diabetes and infectious
diseases by studying neuroscience, genetics,
cell and plant biology, and related
disciplines.
Faculty
achievements have been recognized with
numerous honors, including Nobel Prizes and
memberships in the National Academy of
Sciences. Founded in 1960 by polio vaccine
pioneer Jonas Salk, M.D., the Institute is
an independent nonprofit organization and
architectural landmark.