Life-span extension in mice by preweaning food restriction and by methionine restriction in middle age

L Sun, AA Sadighi Akha, RA Miller… - Journals of Gerontology …, 2009 - academic.oup.com
L Sun, AA Sadighi Akha, RA Miller, JM Harper
Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biomedical Sciences and Medical …, 2009academic.oup.com
Life span can be extended in rodents by restricting food availability (caloric restriction [CR])
or by providing food low in methionine (Meth-R). Here, we show that a period of food
restriction limited to the first 20 days of life, via a 50% enlargement of litter size, shows
extended median and maximal life span relative to mice from normal sized litters and that a
Meth-R diet initiated at 12 months of age also significantly increases longevity. Furthermore,
mice exposed to a CR diet show changes in liver messenger RNA patterns, in …
Abstract
Life span can be extended in rodents by restricting food availability (caloric restriction [CR]) or by providing food low in methionine (Meth-R). Here, we show that a period of food restriction limited to the first 20 days of life, via a 50% enlargement of litter size, shows extended median and maximal life span relative to mice from normal sized litters and that a Meth-R diet initiated at 12 months of age also significantly increases longevity. Furthermore, mice exposed to a CR diet show changes in liver messenger RNA patterns, in phosphorylation of Erk, Jnk2, and p38 kinases, and in phosphorylation of mammalian target of rapamycin and its substrate 4EBP1, HE-binding protein 1 that are not observed in liver from age-matched Meth-R mice. These results introduce new protocols that can increase maximal life span and suggest that the spectrum of metabolic changes induced by low-calorie and low-methionine diets may differ in instructive ways.
Oxford University Press