Sutphin George L, Bishop Emma, Yanos Melana E, Moller Richard M, Kaeberlein Matt
Department of Pathology, University of Washington, Box 357470, Seattle, 98195-7470, WA, USA ; Molecular and Cellular Biology Program, University of Washington, Box 357275, Seattle, 98195-7275, WA, USA.
Department of Pathology, University of Washington, Box 357470, Seattle, 98195-7470, WA, USA.
Longev Healthspan. 2012 Dec 1;1:9. doi: 10.1186/2046-2395-1-9. eCollection 2012.
The longevity of an organism is influenced by both genetic and environmental factors. With respect to genetic factors, a significant effort is being made to identify pharmacological agents that extend life span by targeting pathways with a defined role in the aging process. On the environmental side, the molecular mechanisms responsible for the positive influence of interventions such as dietary restriction are being explored. The environment experienced by humans in modern societies already contains countless compounds that may influence longevity. Understanding the role played by common compounds that substantially affect the aging process will be critical for predicting and interpreting the outcome of introducing new interventions. Caffeine is the most widely used psychoactive drug worldwide. Prior studies in flies, worms, and mice indicate that caffeine may positively impact age-associated neurodegenerative pathology, such as that observed in Alzheimer's disease.
Here we report that caffeine is capable of extending life span and improving healthspan in Caenorhabditis elegans, a finding that is in agreement with a recently published screen looking for FDA-approved compounds capable of extending worm life span. Life span extension using caffeine displays epistatic interaction with two known longevity interventions: dietary restriction and reduced insulin signaling. Caffeine treatment also delays pathology in a nematode model of polyglutamine disease.
The identification of caffeine as a relevant factor in aging and healthspan in worms, combined with prior work in both humans and rodents linking caffeine consumption to reduced risk of age-associated disease, suggests that caffeine may target conserved longevity pathways. Further, it may be important to consider caffeine consumption when developing clinical interventions, particularly those designed to mimic dietary restriction or modulate insulin/IGF-1-like signaling. The positive impact of caffeine on a worm model of polyglutamine disease suggests that chronic caffeine consumption may generally enhance resistance to proteotoxic stress and may be relevant to assessing risk and developing treatments for human diseases like Alzheimer's and Huntington's disease. Future work addressing the relevant targets of caffeine in models of aging and healthspan will help to clarify the underlying mechanisms and potentially identify new molecular targets for disease intervention.
生物体的寿命受遗传和环境因素的影响。在遗传因素方面,人们正在做出巨大努力,以确定通过靶向在衰老过程中具有明确作用的途径来延长寿命的药物。在环境方面,正在探索诸如饮食限制等干预措施产生积极影响的分子机制。现代社会中人类所接触的环境已经包含了无数可能影响寿命的化合物。了解那些对衰老过程有重大影响的常见化合物所起的作用,对于预测和解释引入新干预措施的结果至关重要。咖啡因是全球使用最广泛的精神活性药物。先前在果蝇、蠕虫和小鼠中的研究表明,咖啡因可能对与年龄相关的神经退行性病变产生积极影响,如在阿尔茨海默病中观察到的那样。
在此我们报告,咖啡因能够延长秀丽隐杆线虫的寿命并改善其健康寿命,这一发现与最近一项寻找能够延长线虫寿命的FDA批准化合物的筛选结果一致。使用咖啡因延长寿命与两种已知的长寿干预措施表现出上位性相互作用:饮食限制和胰岛素信号传导减弱。咖啡因处理还能延缓多聚谷氨酰胺疾病线虫模型中的病变。
咖啡因被确定为线虫衰老和健康寿命的相关因素,再加上先前在人类和啮齿动物中关于咖啡因摄入与降低年龄相关疾病风险的研究,表明咖啡因可能靶向保守的长寿途径。此外,在开发临床干预措施时,尤其是那些旨在模拟饮食限制或调节胰岛素/IGF - 1样信号传导的措施时,考虑咖啡因摄入可能很重要。咖啡因对多聚谷氨酰胺疾病线虫模型的积极影响表明,长期摄入咖啡因可能总体上增强对蛋白质毒性应激的抵抗力,并且可能与评估人类疾病如阿尔茨海默病和亨廷顿病的风险及开发治疗方法相关。未来针对衰老和健康寿命模型中咖啡因相关靶点的研究将有助于阐明潜在机制,并可能确定疾病干预的新分子靶点。