Caloric restriction (CR) protects against aging and disease but the mechanisms by which this affects mammalian lifespan are unclear. We show in mice that deletion of the nutrient-responsive mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) signaling pathway component ribosomal S6 protein kinase 1 (S6K1) led to increased lifespan and resistance to age-related pathologies such as bone, immune and motor dysfunction and loss of insulin sensitivity. Deletion of S6K1 induced gene expression patterns similar to those seen in CR or with pharmacological activation of adenosine monophosphate (AMP)-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a conserved regulator of the metabolic response to CR. Our results demonstrate that S6K1 influences healthy mammalian lifespan, and suggest therapeutic manipulation of S6K1 and AMPK might mimic CR and provide broad protection against diseases of aging. Genetic studies in S. cerevisiae, C. elegans and D. melanogaster implicate several mechanisms in the regulation of lifespan. These include the insulin and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) signaling (IIS) and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathways which both activate the downstream effector ribosomal protein S6 kinase 1 (S6K1) (1, 2). Although the role of these pathways in mammalian aging is less clear, there is mounting evidence that IIS regulates lifespan in mice (1). Global deletion of one allele of the IGF1 receptor (Igf1r), adipose-specific deletion of the insulin receptor (Insr), global deletion of insulin receptor substrate protein 1 (Irs1) or neuron-specific deletion of Irs2 all increase mouse lifespan (1). Lifespan-extending mutations in the somatotropic axis also appear to work through attenuated IIS (3). Igf1r has also been implicated as a modulator of human longevity (4). However, the action of downstream effectors of IIS or mTOR signaling in mammalian longevity is not fully understood.S6K1 transduces anabolic signals that indicate nutritional status to regulate cell size and growth and metabolism through various mechanisms (5). These include effects on the translational machinery and on cellular energy levels through the activity of adenosine monophosphate (AMP)-activated protein kinase (AMPK) (6, 7). Furthermore, S6K1 serine phosphorylates IRS1 and IRS2 thereby decreasing insulin signaling (5). Given the key role of S6K1 in IIS and mTOR signaling, and the regulation of aging in lower organisms by mTOR, S6K, and their downstream effectors (2) we used log rank testing to evaluate differences in lifespan of wild-type (WT) and S6K1 -/-littermate mice on a C57BL/6 background (8). Data for both sexes combined showed median lifespan in S6K1 -/-mice increased by 80 days (from 862 to 942 days) or 9% relative to that of WT mice (X 2 = 10.52, p < 0.001) ( Fig. 1A and Table 1). Maximum lifespan (mean lifespan of the oldest 10% within a cohort) was also increased (1077±16 and 1175±24 days, p < 0.01 for WT and S6K1 -/-mice, respectively). Analysis of each sex separately showed that median lifespan in female S6K1 -/-mice was increased, by 153 d...
Recent evidence suggests that alterations in insulin/insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1) signaling (IIS) can increase mammalian life span. For example, in several mouse mutants, impairment of the growth hormone (GH)/IGF1 axis increases life span and also insulin sensitivity. However, the intracellular signaling route to altered mammalian aging remains unclear. We therefore measured the life span of mice lacking either insulin receptor substrate (IRS) 1 or 2, the major intracellular effectors of the IIS receptors. Our provisional results indicate that female Irs1-/- mice are long-lived. Furthermore, they displayed resistance to a range of age-sensitive markers of aging including skin, bone, immune, and motor dysfunction. These improvements in health were seen despite mild, lifelong insulin resistance. Thus, enhanced insulin sensitivity is not a prerequisite for IIS mutant longevity. Irs1-/- female mice also displayed normal anterior pituitary function, distinguishing them from long-lived somatotrophic axis mutants. In contrast, Irs2-/- mice were short-lived, whereas Irs1+/- and Irs2+/- mice of both sexes showed normal life spans. Our results therefore suggest that IRS1 signaling is an evolutionarily conserved pathway regulating mammalian life span and may be a point of intervention for therapies with the potential to delay age-related processes.
SummaryPI3K signaling is thought to mediate leptin and insulin action in hypothalamic pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) and agouti-related protein (AgRP) neurons, key regulators of energy homeostasis, through largely unknown mechanisms. We inactivated either p110α or p110β PI3K catalytic subunits in these neurons and demonstrate a dominant role for the latter in energy homeostasis regulation. In POMC neurons, p110β inactivation prevented insulin- and leptin-stimulated electrophysiological responses. POMCp110β null mice exhibited central leptin resistance, increased adiposity, and diet-induced obesity. In contrast, the response to leptin was not blocked in p110α-deficient POMC neurons. Accordingly, POMCp110α null mice displayed minimal energy homeostasis abnormalities. Similarly, in AgRP neurons, p110β had a more important role than p110α. AgRPp110α null mice displayed normal energy homeostasis regulation, whereas AgRPp110β null mice were lean, with increased leptin sensitivity and resistance to diet-induced obesity. These results demonstrate distinct metabolic roles for the p110α and p110β isoforms of PI3K in hypothalamic energy regulation.
Defective insulin secretion in response to glucose is an important component of the β cell dysfunction seen in type 2 diabetes. As mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation plays a key role in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS), oxygen-sensing pathways may modulate insulin release. The von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) protein controls the degradation of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) to coordinate cellular and organismal responses to altered oxygenation. To determine the role of this pathway in controlling glucose-stimulated insulin release from pancreatic β cells, we generated mice lacking Vhl in pancreatic β cells (βVhlKO mice) and mice lacking Vhl in the pancreas (PVhlKO mice). Both mouse strains developed glucose intolerance with impaired insulin secretion. Furthermore, deletion of Vhl in β cells or the pancreas altered expression of genes involved in β cell function, including those involved in glucose transport and glycolysis, and isolated βVhlKO and PVhlKO islets displayed impaired glucose uptake and defective glucose metabolism. The abnormal glucose homeostasis was dependent on upregulation of Hif-1α expression, and deletion of Hif1a in Vhl-deficient β cells restored GSIS. Consistent with this, expression of activated Hif-1α in a mouse β cell line impaired GSIS. These data suggest that VHL/HIF oxygen-sensing mechanisms play a critical role in glucose homeostasis and that activation of this pathway in response to decreased islet oxygenation may contribute to β cell dysfunction. IntroductionBlood glucose levels are normally tightly controlled by the regulation of insulin release from the pancreatic β cells. Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) is a complex metabolic process involving the uptake and phosphorylation of glucose via GLUT2 transporters and glucokinase (Gck), respectively, metabolism of glucose-6-phosphate via the glycolytic pathway, and subsequent activation of mitochondrial metabolism to produce coupling factors such as ATP (1). A rise in the cytoplasmic ATP/ADP ratio leads to closure of K ATP channels, depolarization of the plasma membrane, opening of voltage-sensitive Ca 2+ channels, and activation of Ca 2+ -dependent exocytotic mechanisms, resulting in insulin secretion (1). This metabolic sensing mechanism requires molecular oxygen for the quantitative generation of ATP from glucose. Understanding the complex physi-
Caloric restriction (CR) increases healthy life span in a range of organisms. The underlying mechanisms are not understood but appear to include changes in gene expression, protein function, and metabolism. Recent studies demonstrate that acute CR alters mortality rates within days in flies. Multitissue transcriptional changes and concomitant metabolic responses to acute CR have not been described. We generated whole genome RNA transcript profiles in liver, skeletal muscle, colon, and hypothalamus and simultaneously measured plasma metabolites using proton nuclear magnetic resonance in mice subjected to acute CR. Liver and muscle showed increased gene expressions associated with fatty acid metabolism and a reduction in those involved in hepatic lipid biosynthesis. Glucogenic amino acids increased in plasma, and gene expression for hepatic gluconeogenesis was enhanced. Increased expression of genes for hormone-mediated signaling and decreased expression of genes involved in protein binding and development occurred in hypothalamus. Cell proliferation genes were decreased and cellular transport genes increased in colon. Acute CR captured many, but not all, hepatic transcriptional changes of long-term CR. Our findings demonstrate a clear transcriptional response across multiple tissues during acute CR, with congruent plasma metabolite changes. Liver and muscle switched gene expression away from energetically expensive biosynthetic processes toward energy conservation and utilization processes, including fatty acid metabolism and gluconeogenesis. Both muscle and colon switched gene expression away from cellular proliferation. Mice undergoing acute CR rapidly adopt many transcriptional and metabolic changes of long-term CR, suggesting that the beneficial effects of CR may require only a short-term reduction in caloric intake.
Aims/hypothesis Insulin signalling pathways regulate pancreatic beta cell function. Conditional gene targeting using the Cre/loxP system has demonstrated that mice lacking insulin receptor substrate 2 (IRS2) in the beta cell have reduced beta cell mass. However, these studies have been complicated by hypothalamic deletion when the RIPCre (B6.Cg-tg(Ins2-cre) 25Mgn/J) transgenic mouse (expressing Cre recombinase under the control of the rat insulin II promoter) is used to delete floxed alleles in insulin-expressing cells. These features have led to marked insulin resistance making the beta cellautonomous role of IRS2 difficult to determine. To establish the effect of deleting Irs2 only in the pancreas, we generated PIrs2KO mice in which Cre recombinase expression was driven by the promoter of the pancreatic and duodenal homeobox factor 1 (Pdx1, also known as Ipf1) gene. Materials and methodsIn vivo glucose homeostasis was examined in PIrs2KO mice using glucose tolerance and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion tests. Endocrine cell mass was determined by morphometric analysis. Islet function was examined in static cultures and by performing calcium imaging in Fluo3am-loaded beta cells. Islet gene expression was determined by RT-PCR. Results The PIrs2KO mice displayed glucose intolerance and impaired glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in vivo. Pancreatic insulin and glucagon content and beta and alpha cell mass were reduced. Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and calcium mobilisation were attenuated in PIrs2KO islets. Expression of the Glut2 gene (also known as Slc2a2) was also reduced in PIrs2KO mice. Conclusions/interpretation These studies suggest that IRS2-dependent signalling in pancreatic islets is required not only for the maintenance of normal beta and alpha cell mass but is also involved in the regulation of insulin secretion.
Taguchi et al. (Reports, 20 July 2007, p. 369) reported that mice heterozygous for a null mutation in insulin receptor substrate-2 (Irs2) display a 17% increase in median life span. However, using the same mouse model, we find no evidence for life-span extension and suggest that the findings of Taguchi et al. were due to atypical life-span profiles in their study animals. T aguchi et al.(1) demonstrated a 17% increase in median and maximum life span in Irs2 +/-compared with wild-type (WT) mice on a C57BL/6J background. Although timeconsuming and expensive, mouse longevity studies require replication to confirm that findings are robust and reproducible across laboratories and hence of broad applicability to mammalian aging. We made a parallel study of Irs2 +/-mice (2) using the same model (3, 4) but, in contrast to Taguchi et al., we did not see life-span extension (2).Using Irs2 +/-parents, we bred WT and Irs2 +/-mice and aged them in a specific-pathogen-free facility in individually ventilated cages under our standard husbandry conditions (2, 5). We studied 51 WT and 87 Irs2 +/-mice, which is close to the expected Mendelian ratio of progeny genotypes. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were indistinguishable between the two genotypes (Fig. 1A), with no significant differences in cumulative mortality rate (log-rank test: X 2 = 1.79, P > 0.05). Parental identity, sex, genotype, and birth date had no significant influence on life span (Cox regression analysis, table S1).We sought explanations for the discrepancy by examining the respective study designs and directly comparing the published longevity data (1, 2). Both studies used the same genetargeted animal (3, 4) on a C57BL/6J background and similar husbandry conditions, although Taguchi et al. used a relatively high-fat diet (9% fat) compared with our study (5% fat). Differences in dietary composition might influence longevity (6-8). Taguchi et al. reported data from 30 WT and 31 Irs2 +/-mice, a 1:1 ratio, which implies that not all progeny from their Irs2 +/-× Irs2 +/-intercrosses used to generate the study groups (and which should give a 1:2 ratio of WT:Irs2 +/-animals) were entered into the study. One possibility is that a potential failure to study all the available Irs2 +/-progeny from these crosses in the life-span trials introduced an uncontrolled variable (e.g., parental identity or recruitment date), which increased the life span of the Irs2 +/-population. Indeed, these factors appeared to influence the longevity of offspring independent of genotype in the Taguchi et al. study (1). A difference in the number of backcrosses onto the C57BL/6J background (6 for Taguchi et al. and 10 for our animals) and potential differences in colony health status and stocking density may also explain the observed differences.Comparison of the longevity profiles of the WT control animals in the two studies (1, 2) shows similar cumulative mortality risk profiles and median life span (Table 1; X 2 = 1.62, P > 0.05). However, Kaplan-Meier survival curves constructed using Taguch...
Insulin receptor signaling regulates female reproductive function acting in the central nervous system and ovary. Female mice that globally lack insulin receptor substrate (IRS) 2, which is a key mediator of insulin receptor action, are infertile with defects in hypothalamic and ovarian functions. To unravel the tissue-specific roles of IRS2, we examined reproductive function in female mice that lack Irs2 only in the neurons. Surprisingly, these animals had minimal defects in pituitary and ovarian hormone levels, ovarian anatomy and function, and breeding performance, which indicates that the central nervous system IRS2 is not an obligatory signaling component for the regulation of reproductive function. Therefore, we undertook a detailed analysis of ovarian function in a novel Irs2 global null mouse line. Comparative morphometric analysis showed reduced follicle size, increased numbers of atretic follicles, as well as impaired oocyte growth and antral cavity development in Irs2 null ovaries. Granulosa cell proliferation was also defective in the Irs2 null ovaries. Furthermore, the insulin- and eCG-stimulated phosphoinositide-3-OH kinase signaling events, which included phosphorylation of Akt/protein kinase B and glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta, were impaired, whereas mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling was preserved in Irs2 null ovaries. These abnormalities were associated with reduced expression of cyclin D2 and increased CDKN1B levels, which indicates dysregulation of key components of the cell cycle apparatus implicated in ovarian function. Our data suggest that ovarian rather than central nervous system IRS2 signaling is important in the regulation of female reproductive function.
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