Al-Regaiey Khalid A, Masternak Michal M, Bonkowski Michael, Sun Liou, Bartke Andrzej
Department of Physiology, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, Illinois 62794-9628, USA.
Endocrinology. 2005 Feb;146(2):851-60. doi: 10.1210/en.2004-1120. Epub 2004 Oct 21.
Reduced IGF-I/insulin signaling and caloric restriction (CR) are known to extend the life span and delay age-related diseases. To address the interaction of these two interventions, we subjected normal (N) and long-lived GH receptor knockout (GHRKO) mice to CR for 20 months starting at weaning. We also used bovine GH transgenic (bGH Tg) mice, which overexpress GH and are short-lived and insulin resistant, for comparison. Circulating insulin and IGF-I levels were reduced by CR in N animals, whereas GHRKO animals exhibited very low insulin and undetectable IGF-I. Consistently, hepatic Akt phosphorylation was reduced by CR and was very low in GHRKO mice. bGH Tg mice exhibited increased active Akt. The forkhead box O1 (Foxo1) transcription factor was additively increased by CR and GHRKO at the mRNA level. However, Foxo1 protein levels were only elevated in GHRKO mice. The coactivator peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1alpha was increased at both gene and protein levels in GHRKO mice. N-CR and GHRKO mice also exhibited increased phosphorylated cAMP response element-binding protein and active p38 compared with the N ad libitum-fed mice, and the levels of these proteins were greatly diminished in bGH Tg mice. The protein levels of the deacetylase sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) were elevated in the two CR groups and, unexpectedly, also in bGH Tg mice. These results suggest a major role for the Akt/Foxo1 pathway in the regulation of longevity in rodents. An activated gluconeogenic pathway and increased fat metabolism may be involved in mediating the effects of reduced somatotropic and insulin signaling on longevity. These results also add to the evidence that targeted disruption of the GH receptor/GH-binding protein gene and CR act via overlapping, but distinct, mechanisms.
已知胰岛素样生长因子-I(IGF-I)/胰岛素信号传导减弱和热量限制(CR)可延长寿命并延缓与年龄相关的疾病。为了研究这两种干预措施的相互作用,我们从断奶开始对正常(N)小鼠和长寿的生长激素受体基因敲除(GHRKO)小鼠进行了20个月的热量限制。我们还使用了牛生长激素转基因(bGH Tg)小鼠进行比较,这些小鼠过度表达生长激素,寿命较短且具有胰岛素抵抗性。CR使N组动物的循环胰岛素和IGF-I水平降低,而GHRKO动物的胰岛素水平极低,IGF-I检测不到。同样,CR使肝脏Akt磷酸化降低,而GHRKO小鼠的肝脏Akt磷酸化水平非常低。bGH Tg小鼠的活性Akt增加。在mRNA水平上,叉头框O1(Foxo1)转录因子通过CR和GHRKO的联合作用而增加。然而,Foxo1蛋白水平仅在GHRKO小鼠中升高。共激活因子过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体γ共激活因子1α在GHRKO小鼠的基因和蛋白水平上均增加。与自由采食的N组小鼠相比,N-CR组和GHRKO小鼠的磷酸化cAMP反应元件结合蛋白和活性p38也增加,而这些蛋白的水平在bGH Tg小鼠中大大降低。去乙酰化酶沉默调节蛋白1(SIRT1)的蛋白水平在两个CR组中升高,出乎意料的是,在bGH Tg小鼠中也升高。这些结果表明Akt/Foxo1通路在调节啮齿动物寿命中起主要作用。激活的糖异生途径和增加的脂肪代谢可能参与介导生长激素和胰岛素信号传导减弱对寿命的影响。这些结果也进一步证明,生长激素受体/GH结合蛋白基因的靶向破坏和CR通过重叠但不同的机制发挥作用。