Mapping the Genes that Increase Lifespan
Comprehensive study finds 238 genes that affect aging in yeast cells.
October 5, 2015/Novato, California Following
an exhaustive, ten-year effort, scientists at the Buck Institute for
Research on Aging and the University of Washington have identified 238
genes that, when removed, increase the replicative lifespan of S. cerevisiae
yeast cells. This is the first time 189 of these genes have been linked
to aging. These results provide new genomic targets that could
eventually be used to improve human health. The research was published
online on October 8th in the journal Cell Metabolism.
“This study looks at
aging in the context of the whole genome and gives us a more complete
picture of what aging is,” said Brian Kennedy, PhD, lead author and the
Buck Institute’s president and CEO. “It also sets up a framework to
define the entire network that influences aging in this organism.”
The Kennedy lab
collaborated closely with Matt Kaeberlein, PhD, a professor in the
Department of Pathology at the University of Washington, and his team.
The two groups began the painstaking process of examining 4,698 yeast
strains, each with a single gene deletion. To determine which strains
yielded increased lifespan, the researchers counted yeast cells, logging
how many daughter cells a mother produced before it stopped dividing.
“We had a small needle attached to a microscope, and we used that needle to
tease out the daughter cells away from the mother every time it divided
and then count how many times the mother cells divides,” said Dr.
Kennedy. “We had several microscopes running all the time.”
These efforts produced a
wealth of information about how different genes, and their associated
pathways, modulate aging in yeast. Deleting a gene called LOS1 produced
particularly stunning results. LOS1 helps relocate transfer RNA (tRNA),
which bring amino acids to ribosomes to build proteins. LOS1 is
influenced by mTOR, a genetic master switch long associated with caloric
restriction and increased lifespan. In turn, LOS1 influences Gcn4, a
gene that helps govern DNA damage control.
“Calorie restriction has
been known to extend lifespan for a long time.” said Dr. Kennedy. “The
DNA damage response is linked to aging as well. LOS1 may be connecting
these different processes.”
A number of the age-extending genes the team identified are also found in C. elegans
roundworms, indicating these mechanisms are conserved in higher
organisms. In fact, many of the anti-aging pathways associated with
yeast genes are maintained all the way to humans.
The research produced another positive result: exposing emerging scientists to advanced lab techniques, many for the first time.
“This project has been a
great way to get new researchers into the field,” said Dr. Kennedy. “We
did a lot of the work by recruiting undergraduates, teaching them how to
do experiments and how dedicated you have to be to get results. After a
year of dissecting yeast cells, we move them into other projects.”
Though quite extensive,
this research is only part of a larger process to map the relationships
between all the gene pathways that govern aging, illuminating this
critical process in yeast, worms and mammals. The researchers hope that,
ultimately, these efforts will produce new therapies.
“Almost half of the genes
we found that affect aging are conserved in mammals,” said Dr. Kennedy.
“In theory, any of these factors could be therapeutic targets to extend
healthspan. What we have to do now is figure out which ones are
amenable to targeting.”
Other Buck Institute
researchers involved in the study include: Mark A. McCormick (first
co-author), Mitsuhiro Tsuchiya, Scott Tsuchiyama, Arianna Anies, Juniper
K. Pennypacker, Shiena Enerio, Dan Lockshon, Brett Robinson, Ariana A.
Rodriguez, Marc K. Ting, and Rachel B. Brem. A full list of authors is
included in the paper.
This research was
supported by NIH grants R01AG043080, R01AG025549, R01AG039390 and
P30AG013280, as well as NIH training grants T32AG000266, T32AG000057 and
T32ES007032 and the Ellison Medical Foundation.
Citation: A
comprehensive analysis of replicative lifespan in 4,698 single-gene
deletion strains uncovers novel mechanisms of aging
About the Buck Institute for Research on Aging
The Buck Institute is the
U.S.’s first independent research organization devoted to Geroscience –
focused on the connection between normal aging and chronic disease.
Based in Novato, CA, The Buck is dedicated to extending “Healthspan”,
the healthy years of human life and does so utilizing a unique
interdisciplinary approach involving laboratories studying the
mechanisms of aging and those focused on specific diseases. Buck
scientists strive to discover new ways of detecting, preventing and
treating age-related diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s,
cancer, cardiovascular disease, macular degeneration, osteoporosis,
diabetes and stroke. In their collaborative research, they are
supported by the most recent developments in genomics, proteomics,
bioinformatics and stem cell technologies.
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