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衰老:我们能从大象身上学到什么。

Aging: What We Can Learn From Elephants.

作者信息

Chusyd Daniella E, Ackermans Nicole L, Austad Steven N, Hof Patrick R, Mielke Michelle M, Sherwood Chet C, Allison David B

机构信息

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Indiana University-Bloomington, Bloomington, IN, United States.

Nash Family Department of Neuroscience and Friedman Brain Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, United States.

出版信息

Front Aging. 2021 Aug 26;2:726714. doi: 10.3389/fragi.2021.726714. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Elephants are large-brained, social mammals with a long lifespan. Studies of elephants can provide insight into the aging process, which may be relevant to understanding diseases that affect elderly humans because of their shared characteristics that have arisen through independent evolution. Elephants become sexually mature at 12 to 14 years of age and are known to live into, and past, their 7 decade of life. Because of their relatively long lifespans, elephants may have evolved mechanisms to counter age-associated morbidities, such as cancer and cognitive decline. Elephants rely heavily on their memory, and engage in multiple levels of competitive and collaborative relationships because they live in a fission-fusion system. Female matrilineal relatives and dependent offspring form tight family units led by an older-aged matriarch, who serves as the primary repository for social and ecological knowledge in the herd. Similar to humans, elephants demonstrate a dependence on social bonds, memory, and cognition to navigate their environment, behaviors that might be associated with specializations of brain anatomy. Compared with other mammals, the elephant hippocampus is proportionally smaller, whereas the temporal lobe is disproportionately large and expands laterally. The elephant cerebellum is also relatively enlarged, and the cerebral cortex is highly convoluted with numerous gyral folds, more than in humans. Last, an interesting characteristic unique to elephants is the presence of at least 20 copies of the tumor suppressor gene Humans have only a single copy. encodes for the p53 protein, which is known to orchestrate cellular response to DNA damage. The effects of these multiple copies of are still being investigated, but it may be to protect elephants against multiple age-related diseases. For these reasons, among others, studies of elephants would be highly informative for aging research. Elephants present an underappreciated opportunity to explore further common principles of aging in a large-brained mammal with extended longevity. Such research can contribute to contextualizing our knowledge of age-associated morbidities in humans.

摘要

大象是大脑发达的群居哺乳动物,寿命很长。对大象的研究可以深入了解衰老过程,这可能与理解影响老年人类的疾病有关,因为它们具有通过独立进化而产生的共同特征。大象在12至14岁时性成熟,已知能活到70多岁甚至更久。由于它们相对较长的寿命,大象可能已经进化出应对与年龄相关疾病的机制,如癌症和认知衰退。大象严重依赖记忆力,并参与多层次的竞争与合作关系,因为它们生活在裂变融合体系中。雌性母系亲属和依赖的后代组成紧密的家庭单位,由一位年长的女族长领导,她是象群中社会和生态知识的主要储存库。与人类相似,大象表现出对社会纽带、记忆和认知的依赖,以在其环境中活动,这些行为可能与大脑解剖结构的特化有关。与其他哺乳动物相比,大象的海马体相对较小,而颞叶则不成比例地大且向侧面扩展。大象的小脑也相对增大,大脑皮层高度卷曲,有许多脑回褶皱,比人类的还多。最后,大象独有的一个有趣特征是存在至少20个肿瘤抑制基因的拷贝,而人类只有一个拷贝。该基因编码p53蛋白,已知其能协调细胞对DNA损伤的反应。这些多个拷贝的影响仍在研究中,但可能是为了保护大象免受多种与年龄相关的疾病。出于这些及其他原因,对大象的研究对衰老研究将具有高度的参考价值。大象提供了一个未被充分重视的机会,可以在一种大脑发达、寿命延长的哺乳动物中进一步探索衰老的共同原理。这样的研究有助于将我们对人类与年龄相关疾病的认识置于背景之中。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/6b48/9261397/93e1434aec1e/fragi-02-726714-g001.jpg

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