Leonard Davis School of Gerontology of the Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089, USA.
Molecular and Computational Biology Program, Department of Biological Sciences of the Dornsife College of Letters, Arts & Sciences: the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0191, USA.
J Physiol. 2017 Dec 15;595(24):7275-7309. doi: 10.1113/JP275072. Epub 2017 Nov 21.
Adaptive homeostasis is "the transient expansion or contraction of the homeostatic range for any given physiological parameter in response to exposure to sub-toxic, non-damaging, signalling molecules or events, or the removal or cessation of such molecules or events" (Davies, 2016). Adaptive homeostasis enables biological systems to make continuous short-term adjustments for optimal functioning despite ever-changing internal and external environments. Initiation of adaptation in response to an appropriate signal allows organisms to successfully cope with much greater, normally toxic, stresses. These short-term responses are initiated following effective signals, including hypoxia, cold shock, heat shock, oxidative stress, exercise-induced adaptation, caloric restriction, osmotic stress, mechanical stress, immune response, and even emotional stress. There is now substantial literature detailing a decline in adaptive homeostasis that, unfortunately, appears to manifest with ageing, especially in the last third of the lifespan. In this review, we present the hypothesis that one hallmark of the ageing process is a significant decline in adaptive homeostasis capacity. We discuss the mechanistic importance of diminished capacity for short-term (reversible) adaptive responses (both biochemical and signal transduction/gene expression-based) to changing internal and external conditions, for short-term survival and for lifespan and healthspan. Studies of cultured mammalian cells, worms, flies, rodents, simians, apes, and even humans, all indicate declining adaptive homeostasis as a potential contributor to age-dependent senescence, increased risk of disease, and even mortality. Emerging work points to Nrf2-Keap1 signal transduction pathway inhibitors, including Bach1 and c-Myc, both of whose tissue concentrations increase with age, as possible major causes for age-dependent loss of adaptive homeostasis.
适应性内稳态是指“在暴露于亚毒性、非破坏性的信号分子或事件,或去除或停止这些分子或事件的情况下,任何给定生理参数的内稳态范围的短暂扩张或收缩”(Davies,2016)。适应性内稳态使生物系统能够在不断变化的内部和外部环境中持续进行短期调整,以实现最佳功能。对适当信号的适应的启动使生物体能够成功应对通常毒性更大的压力。这些短期反应是在有效的信号启动后开始的,包括缺氧、冷休克、热休克、氧化应激、运动诱导适应、热量限制、渗透压应激、机械应激、免疫反应,甚至情绪应激。现在有大量文献详细描述了适应性内稳态的下降,不幸的是,这种下降似乎随着年龄的增长而出现,尤其是在生命的最后三分之一。在这篇综述中,我们提出了一个假设,即衰老过程的一个标志是适应性内稳态能力的显著下降。我们讨论了短期(可逆)适应性反应(基于生化和信号转导/基因表达)能力下降对内部和外部条件变化的短期生存以及寿命和健康寿命的机械重要性。对培养的哺乳动物细胞、蠕虫、苍蝇、啮齿动物、灵长类动物、猿类,甚至人类的研究都表明,适应性内稳态的下降可能是与年龄相关的衰老、疾病风险增加甚至死亡率增加的一个潜在原因。新出现的工作表明,Nrf2-Keap1 信号转导途径抑制剂,包括 Bach1 和 c-Myc,其组织浓度随着年龄的增长而增加,可能是导致与年龄相关的适应性内稳态丧失的主要原因。