Insulin regulation of heart function in aging fruit flies

RJ Wessells, E Fitzgerald, JR Cypser, M Tatar… - Nature …, 2004 - nature.com
RJ Wessells, E Fitzgerald, JR Cypser, M Tatar, R Bodmer
Nature genetics, 2004nature.com
Insulin-IGF receptor (InR) signaling has a conserved role in regulating lifespan, but little is
known about the genetic control of declining organ function. Here, we describe progressive
changes of heart function in aging fruit flies: from one to seven weeks of a fly's age, the
resting heart rate decreases and the rate of stress-induced heart failure increases. These
age-related changes are minimized or absent in long-lived flies when systemic levels of
insulin-like peptides are reduced and by mutations of the only receptor, InR, or its substrate …
Abstract
Insulin-IGF receptor (InR) signaling has a conserved role in regulating lifespan, but little is known about the genetic control of declining organ function. Here, we describe progressive changes of heart function in aging fruit flies: from one to seven weeks of a fly's age, the resting heart rate decreases and the rate of stress-induced heart failure increases. These age-related changes are minimized or absent in long-lived flies when systemic levels of insulin-like peptides are reduced and by mutations of the only receptor, InR, or its substrate, chico. Moreover, interfering with InR signaling exclusively in the heart, by overexpressing the phosphatase dPTEN or the forkhead transcription factor dFOXO, prevents the decline in cardiac performance with age. Thus, insulin-IGF signaling influences age-dependent organ physiology and senescence directly and autonomously, in addition to its systemic effect on lifespan. The aging fly heart is a model for studying the genetics of age-sensitive organ-specific pathology.
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