Negative effects of lifespan extending intervention on resilience in mice.

IF 2.9 3区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
PLoS ONE Pub Date : 2024-11-21 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0312440
Katelynn M Corder, Jessica M Hoffman, Anamarija Sogorovic, Youfeng Yang, Anisha Banerjee, Yi Sun, Michael B Stout, Steven N Austad
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Abstract

One key goal of basic aging research is the development of reliable assays of both current and future health. These assays could dramatically accelerate progress toward developing health-extending interventions by obviating the need for full lifespan studies, especially if they were informative relatively early in life. One potential approach is the assessment of physiological resilience, defined as the ability to recover from an adverse event. Here, using CB6F1 mice, we evaluated four potential resilience assays, each quantifying recovery from a physiological challenge with clear relevance to humans. The challenges were: (1) anesthesia recovery, (2) restoration of hemoglobin levels after a blood draw, (3) speed of wound healing, and (4) survival after pathogen exposure. We evaluated how each changed with age and with interventions known to extend health in males only (17α-estradiol) or both sexes (calorie restriction). We found that three of the four (recovery from anesthesia, blood draw, and pathogen exposure) showed significant and expected age effects, but wound healing did not. None of the three age-sensitive assays responded to the health-extending interventions in the way we expected, and for some assays, including anesthesia response, interventions actually worsened outcomes. Possible explanations are: (1) our interventions were too brief, (2) the ages we evaluated were too young, (3) our assays did not capture important features of organismal resilience, or (4) organismal resilience is not as clearly related to current or future health as hypothesized. Future studies are needed to determine which of these interpretations is valid and to determine whether other resilience metrics may be more informative about current and future health.

延长寿命的干预措施对小鼠的恢复能力有负面影响。
基础老龄化研究的一个重要目标是开发可靠的当前和未来健康检测方法。这些检测方法不需要进行整个生命周期的研究,尤其是在生命相对较早的时候提供信息,因此可以大大加快开发延长健康干预措施的进度。一种潜在的方法是评估生理恢复能力,即从不利事件中恢复的能力。在这里,我们利用 CB6F1 小鼠评估了四种潜在的恢复能力检测方法,每种方法都量化了与人类明显相关的生理挑战的恢复能力。这些挑战是(1) 麻醉恢复;(2) 抽血后血红蛋白水平的恢复;(3) 伤口愈合速度;(4) 接触病原体后的存活。我们评估了每项指标随着年龄的增长以及采取已知仅对男性(17α-雌二醇)或对两性(卡路里限制)都能延长健康的干预措施后的变化情况。我们发现,四项指标中的三项(麻醉恢复、抽血和病原体暴露)显示出显著的预期年龄效应,但伤口愈合却没有。在对年龄敏感的三项检测中,没有一项以我们预期的方式对延长健康的干预措施做出反应,而对于包括麻醉反应在内的一些检测,干预措施实际上使结果恶化。可能的解释是(1) 我们的干预措施过于简短;(2) 我们评估的年龄太小;(3) 我们的检测方法没有捕捉到机体复原力的重要特征;或者 (4) 机体复原力与当前或未来健康的关系并不像假设的那样明显。未来的研究需要确定上述哪种解释是有效的,并确定其他复原力指标是否更能说明当前和未来的健康状况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE 生物-生物学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
5.40%
发文量
14242
审稿时长
3.7 months
期刊介绍: PLOS ONE is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access, online publication. PLOS ONE welcomes reports on primary research from any scientific discipline. It provides: * Open-access—freely accessible online, authors retain copyright * Fast publication times * Peer review by expert, practicing researchers * Post-publication tools to indicate quality and impact * Community-based dialogue on articles * Worldwide media coverage
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