[HTML][HTML] Caloric restriction reduces age-related and all-cause mortality in rhesus monkeys

RJ Colman, TM Beasley, JW Kemnitz… - Nature …, 2014 - nature.com
Nature communications, 2014nature.com
Caloric restriction (CR) without malnutrition increases longevity and delays the onset of age-
associated disorders in short-lived species, from unicellular organisms to laboratory mice
and rats. The value of CR as a tool to understand human ageing relies on translatability of
CR's effects in primates. Here we show that CR significantly improves age-related and all-
cause survival in monkeys on a long-term~ 30% restricted diet since young adulthood.
These data contrast with observations in the 2012 NIA intramural study report, where a …
Abstract
Caloric restriction (CR) without malnutrition increases longevity and delays the onset of age-associated disorders in short-lived species, from unicellular organisms to laboratory mice and rats. The value of CR as a tool to understand human ageing relies on translatability of CR’s effects in primates. Here we show that CR significantly improves age-related and all-cause survival in monkeys on a long-term ~30% restricted diet since young adulthood. These data contrast with observations in the 2012 NIA intramural study report, where a difference in survival was not detected between control-fed and CR monkeys. A comparison of body weight of control animals from both studies with each other, and against data collected in a multi-centred relational database of primate ageing, suggests that the NIA control monkeys were effectively undergoing CR. Our data indicate that the benefits of CR on ageing are conserved in primates.
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