Late-life shift in caloric intake affects fly metabolism and longevity

Author:

Li Michael1ORCID,Macro Jacob1,Meadows Kali1,Mishra Dushyant1,Martin Dominique1,Olson Sara12ORCID,Huggins Billy Joe1,Graveley Brenton R.12ORCID,Li James Y. H.12,Rogina Blanka12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics and Genome Sciences, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT 06030

2. Institute for Systems Genomics, School of Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT 06030

Abstract

The prevalence of obesity is increasing in older adults and contributes to age-related decline. Caloric restriction (CR) alleviates obesity phenotypes and delays the onset of age-related changes. However, how late in life organisms benefit from switching from a high-(H) to a low-calorie (L) diet is unclear. We transferred male flies from a H to a L (HL) diet or vice versa (LH) at different times during life. Both shifts immediately change fly rate of aging even when applied late in life. HL shift rapidly reduces fly mortality rate to briefly lower rate than in flies on a constant L diet, and extends lifespan. Transcriptomic analysis uncovers that flies aged on H diet have acquired increased stress response, which may have temporal advantage over flies aged on L diet and leads to rapid decrease in mortality rate after HL switch. Conversely, a LH shift increases mortality rate, which is temporarily higher than in flies aged on a H diet, and shortens lifespan. Unexpectedly, more abundant transcriptomic changes accompanied LH shift, including increase in ribosome biogenesis, stress response and growth. These changes reflect protection from sudden release of ROS, energy storage, and use of energy to growth, which all likely contribute to higher mortality rate. As the beneficial effects of CR on physiology and lifespan are conserved across many organisms, our study provides framework to study underlying mechanisms of CR interventions that counteract the detrimental effects of H diets and reduce rate of aging even when initiated later in life.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute on Aging

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

NIH National Institute of Neuroscience

NIH National Institute on Neuroscience

NIH National Institute Human Genome

NIH National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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