Miller Richard A, Harper James M, Dysko Robert C, Durkee Stephen J, Austad Steven N
Department of Pathology and Geriatrics Center, University of Michigan School of Medicine, 1500 East Medical Center Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Exp Biol Med (Maywood). 2002 Jul;227(7):500-8. doi: 10.1177/153537020222700715.
Nearly all the experimental mice used in aging research are derived from lineages that have been selected for many generations for adaptation to laboratory breeding conditions and are subsequently inbred. To see if inbreeding and laboratory adaptation might have altered the frequencies of genes that influence life span, we have developed three lines of mice (Idaho [Id], Pohnpei [Po], and Majuro [Ma]) from wild-trapped progenitors, and have compared them with a genetically heterogeneous mouse stock (DC) representative of the laboratory-adapted gene pool. Mean life span of the Id stock exceeded that of the DC stock by 24% (P < 0.00002), and maximal life span, estimated as mean longevity of the longest-lived 10% of the mice, was also increased by 16% (P < 0.003). Mice of the Ma stock also had a significantly longer maximal longevity than DC mice (9%, P = 0.04). The longest-lived Id mouse died at the age of 1450 days, which appears to exceed the previous longevity record for fully fed, non-mutant mice. The life table of the Po mice resembled that of the DC controls. Ma and Id mice differ from DC mice in several respects: both are shorter and lighter, and females of both stocks, particularly Id, are much slower to reach sexual maturity. As young adults, Id mice have lower levels of insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-I), leptin, and glycosylated hemoglobin compared with DC controls, implicating several biochemical pathways as potential longevity mediators. The results support the idea that inadvertent selection for rapid maturation and large body size during the adaptation of the common stocks of laboratory mice may have forced the loss of natural alleles that retard the aging process. Genes present in the Id and Ma stocks may be valuable tools for the analysis of the physiology and biochemistry of aging in mice.
衰老研究中使用的几乎所有实验小鼠都来自经过多代选择以适应实验室繁殖条件并随后进行近亲繁殖的品系。为了探究近亲繁殖和实验室适应性是否可能改变了影响寿命的基因频率,我们从野外捕获的祖代小鼠培育了三个品系的小鼠(爱达荷[Id]、波纳佩[Po]和马朱罗[Ma]),并将它们与代表实验室适应性基因库的基因异质小鼠种群(DC)进行了比较。Id种群的平均寿命比DC种群长24%(P < 0.00002),最大寿命(估计为最长寿的10%小鼠的平均寿命)也增加了16%(P < 0.003)。Ma种群的小鼠最大寿命也显著长于DC小鼠(9%,P = 0.04)。最长寿的Id小鼠活到了1450天,这似乎超过了此前完全喂食、非突变小鼠的寿命记录。Po小鼠的生命表与DC对照组相似。Ma和Id小鼠在几个方面与DC小鼠不同:两者体型更短更轻,且两个种群的雌性,尤其是Id种群的雌性,性成熟要慢得多。与DC对照组相比,成年早期的Id小鼠胰岛素样生长因子1(IGF-I)、瘦素和糖化血红蛋白水平较低,这表明几种生化途径可能是潜在的寿命调节因子。结果支持了这样一种观点,即在实验室小鼠常见种群的适应性过程中,对快速成熟和大体型的无意选择可能导致了延缓衰老过程的天然等位基因的丢失。Id和Ma种群中存在的基因可能是分析小鼠衰老生理和生物化学的有价值工具。