Cell biologists have found a more filling substitute for caloric
restriction in extending the life span of simple organisms. In a study
published May
8 in the open-access journal PLoS Genetics, researchers from the
University of Southern California Andrus Gerontology Center show that
baker's yeast
cells maintained on a glycerol diet live twice as long as normal -- as
long as yeast cells on a severe caloric-restriction diet. They are also
more
resistant to cell damage.
Many studies have shown that caloric restriction can extend the life span
of a variety of laboratory animals. Caloric restriction is also known to
cause major improvements in a number of markers for cardiovascular
diseases in humans. This study is the first to propose that "dietary
substitution" can replace "dietary restriction" in a living species.
"If you add glycerol, or restrict caloric intake, you obtain the same
effect," said senior author Valter Longo. "It's as good as calorie
restriction, yet cells can take it up and utilize it to generate energy or
for the synthesis of cellular components."
Longo and colleagues Min Wei and Paola Fabrizio introduced a glycerol diet
after discovering that genetically engineered long-lived yeast cells that
survive up to 5-fold longer than normal have increased levels of the genes
that produce glycerol. In fact, they convert virtually all the glucose and
ethanol into glycerol. Notably, these cells have a reduced activity in the
TOR1/SCH9 pathway, which is also believed to extend life span in organisms
ranging from worms to mice.
When the researchers blocked the genes that produce glycerol, the cells
lost most of their life span advantage. However, Longo and colleagues
believe
that the "glucose to glycerol" switch represents only a component of the
protective systems required for the extended survival. The current study
indicates that glycerol biosynthesis is an important process in the
metabolic switch that allows this simple organism to activate its
protective
systems and live longer.
"This is a fundamental observation in a very simple system," Longo said,
"that at least introduces the possibility that you don't have to be
calorie-restricted to achieve some of the remarkable protective effects of
the hypocaloric diet observed in many organisms, including humans. It may
be sufficient to substitute the carbon source and possibly other
macronutrients with nutrients that do not promote the "pro-aging" changes
induced
by sugars."
CITATION:
"Tor1/Sch9-Regulated Carbon Source Substitution Is as Effective as Calorie Restriction in Life Span Extension."
Wei M, Fabrizio P, Madia F, Hu J, Ge H, et al. (2009)
PLoS Genet 5(5): e1000467.
Source
PLoS Genetics