Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK.
Mol Aspects Med. 2011 Jun;32(3):159-221. doi: 10.1016/j.mam.2011.07.001. Epub 2011 Aug 10.
Restricting the intake of calories has been practiced as a method for increasing both the length and quality of life for over 500 years. Experimental work confirming the success of this approach in animals has accumulated over the last 100 years. Lifelong caloric restriction (CR) may extend life by up to 50% in rodents, with progressively less impact the later in life it is started. This effect is matched by profound impacts on age related diseases including reduced risk of cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, autoimmune disease, cardiovascular disease and type II diabetes mellitus. The disposable soma theory of ageing suggests that CR evolved as a somatic protection response to enable animals to survive periods of food shortage. The shutdown of reproductive function during CR is consistent with this suggestion, but other features of the phenomenon are less consistent with this theory, and some have suggested that in rodents it may be mostly an artifact of domestication. CR induces profound effects on animals at all levels from the transcriptome to whole animal physiology and behavior. Animals under CR lose weight which is disproportionately contributed to by white adipose tissue. Generally animals on CR change their activity patterns so that they are more active prior to food delivery each day but total activity may be unchanged or reduced. Considerable debate has occurred over the effects of CR on resting metabolic rate (RMR). Total RMR declines, but as body mass and body composition also change it is unclear whether metabolism at the tissue level also declines, is unchanged or even increases. Body temperature universally decreases. Hunger is increased and does not seem to abate even with very long term restriction. Circulating adipokines are reduced reflecting the reduction in white adipose tissue (WAT) mass under restriction and there is a large reduction in circulating insulin and glucose levels. There are profound tissue level changes in metabolism with a generalized shift from carbohydrate to fat metabolism. Four pathways have been implicated in mediating the CR effect. These are the insulin like growth factor (IGF-1)/insulin signaling pathway, the sirtuin pathway, the adenosine monophosphate (AMP) activated protein kinase (AMPK) pathway and the target of rapamycin (TOR) pathway. These different pathways may interact and may all play important roles mediating different aspects of the response. Exactly how they generate the health benefits remains open for debate, however CR results in reduced oxidative stress and enhanced autophagy, both of which could be essential components of the beneficial effects. Most data about the effects of CR in mammals comes from work on rodents. There is limited work on non-human primates that shows promising effects and one randomized controlled trial in humans where physiological markers of the CR response are consistent with the responses in mice and rats. There are also populations of humans voluntarily restricting themselves. Humans on long term restriction report similar negative side effects to those observed in animals - perpetual hunger, reduced body temperature leading to a feeling of being cold, and diminished libido. Considerable effort has been directed in recent years to find drugs that mimic the CR response. Promising candidates are those that intersect with the critical signaling pathways identified above and include biguanides such as metformin that target the insulin signaling pathway, stilbenes (e.g. resveratrol) that affect sirtuin activity and drugs such as rapamycin that interact with mTOR signaling. Whether it will ever be possible to find drugs that capture the health benefits of CR without the negative side-effects remains unclear. Moreover, even if such drugs are developed how the current licensing system for drug use in western societies would cope with them may be a further obstacle to their use.
限制热量摄入已经被实践了 500 多年,作为一种延长寿命和提高生活质量的方法。过去 100 年来,证实这种方法在动物身上取得成功的实验工作积累了起来。终身热量限制(CR)可使啮齿动物的寿命延长多达 50%,而且越早开始,其影响就越小。这种效果与年龄相关性疾病的显著降低有关,包括癌症、神经退行性疾病、自身免疫性疾病、心血管疾病和 2 型糖尿病的风险降低。衰老的可丢弃体细胞理论表明,CR 的进化是一种针对体细胞的保护反应,使动物能够在食物短缺时期生存。CR 期间生殖功能的关闭与这一建议一致,但这一现象的其他特征与这一理论不太一致,有些人认为,在啮齿动物中,它可能主要是驯化的一种人为产物。CR 对动物从转录组到整个动物生理和行为的各个层次都产生了深刻的影响。CR 下的动物体重减轻,其中大部分是由白色脂肪组织贡献的。一般来说,CR 下的动物会改变它们的活动模式,以便在每天食物供应前更加活跃,但总活动可能不变或减少。关于 CR 对静息代谢率(RMR)的影响,已经进行了相当多的争论。总 RMR 下降,但由于体重和身体成分也发生了变化,尚不清楚组织水平的代谢是否也下降、不变或甚至增加。体温普遍下降。饥饿感增加,即使长期限制也似乎不会减轻。循环脂联素减少,反映出限制下白色脂肪组织(WAT)质量的减少,而胰岛素和葡萄糖水平也大幅降低。代谢发生了深刻的组织水平变化,碳水化合物向脂肪代谢的一般性转变。有四种途径被牵连到介导 CR 效应中。这些途径是胰岛素样生长因子(IGF-1)/胰岛素信号通路、沉默调节蛋白通路、单磷酸腺苷(AMP)激活蛋白激酶(AMPK)通路和雷帕霉素靶蛋白(TOR)通路。这些不同的途径可能相互作用,可能都对介导反应的不同方面发挥着重要作用。然而,CR 导致氧化应激减少和自噬增强,这两者都可能是有益影响的重要组成部分,确切地说,它们如何产生健康益处仍有待讨论。关于 CR 在哺乳动物中的影响,大多数数据来自于对啮齿动物的研究。对非人类灵长类动物的研究有限,但有一些有希望的结果,在人类中进行了一项随机对照试验,CR 反应的生理标志物与小鼠和大鼠的反应一致。还有一些自愿限制自己的人群。长期限制的人类报告了类似的负面副作用,如持续的饥饿感、体温降低导致的寒冷感,以及性欲减退。近年来,人们已经投入了大量精力来寻找模仿 CR 反应的药物。有前途的候选药物是那些与上述关键信号通路交叉的药物,包括二甲双胍等针对胰岛素信号通路的双胍类药物、白藜芦醇等影响沉默调节蛋白活性的芪类药物,以及与 mTOR 信号相互作用的药物,如雷帕霉素。是否有可能找到没有副作用的药物来捕捉 CR 的健康益处,而不产生负面影响,目前还不清楚。此外,即使开发出了这样的药物,当前西方社会的药物使用许可制度如何应对这些药物,也可能是其使用的进一步障碍。