| Literature DB >> 19370158 |
Preston Wayne Estep1, Jason B Warner, Martha L Bulyk.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Calorie restriction (CR) is the only intervention known to extend lifespan in a wide range of organisms, including mammals. However, the mechanisms by which it regulates mammalian aging remain largely unknown, and the involvement of the TOR and sirtuin pathways (which regulate aging in simpler organisms) remain controversial. Additionally, females of most mammals appear to live longer than males within species; and, although it remains unclear whether this holds true for mice, the relationship between sex-biased and CR-induced gene expression remains largely unexplored. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19370158 PMCID: PMC2667255 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Plot of significance versus fold change of all significant genes.
Plot of significance (absolute value of d, |d|) versus log2 fold change, for all 3,855 genes called significant at q<0.1. Ddit4, the gene with the highest significance score, is shown at upper right.
Aging-related genes upregulated or downregulated by CR, q<0.01.
| Gene | Gene name | Fold Change | FC Rank | Stat Rank | Function |
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| DNA-damage-inducible transcript 4 |
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| Frap1 (mTOR) inhibitory tumor suppressor |
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| Leptin receptor |
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| Regulator of adiposity and metabolism |
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| Aprataxin |
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| DNA repair, binds Parp1, Xrcc1, Xrcc4, p53 |
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| CCAAT/enhancer binding protein delta |
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| Mouse paralog swap increases lifespan |
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| Cathepsin L |
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| Activates Plau by proteolytic cleavage |
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| Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (P21) |
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| Key negative regulator of cell cycle |
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| Nicotinamide N-methyltransferase |
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| Yeast ortholog NNT1 mediates response to CR |
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| Ppargc1a, aka Pgc1-alpha |
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| Sirt1-interacting regulator of metabolism |
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| Connective tissue growth factor |
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| Vascular growth factor; role in aging speculative |
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| CCAAT/enhancer binding protein beta |
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| Replacing |
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| Telomerase reverse transcriptase |
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| Telomerase reverse transcriptase |
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| Plasminogen activator, urokinase |
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| Overexpression in mice extends lifespan |
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| Serum/glucocorticoid regulated kinase |
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| Mitogen activated protein kinase kinase kinase 5 |
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| Involved in stress response and apoptosis |
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| Androgen receptor |
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| Androgen receptor; dihydrotestosterone receptor |
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| Insulin-like growth factor binding protein ALS |
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| Regulator of Igf1 signaling |
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| Bloom syndrome homolog (human) |
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| Involved in DNA repair; Wrn paralog |
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| Growth hormone receptor |
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| Mutation increases mouse lifespan |
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| FMS-like tyrosine kinase 1 |
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| Receptor for Vegf |
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| Forkhead box O1 |
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| Ortholog of lifespan-extending |
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| Nuclear receptor subfamily 3 |
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| Glucocorticoid receptor |
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| Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 |
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| Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 |
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| Tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily |
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| Janus kinase 2 |
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| Associated with many genes linked to aging |
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| Involved in DNA repair |
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| Glutathione S-transferase |
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| Involved in oxidative protection |
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| Glutamate-cysteine ligase |
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| Overexpression in fruitflies extends lifespan |
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| Jun oncogene |
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| Pathway regulates aging in fruitflies and worms |
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| Nfkb inhibitor |
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| Inhibitor of NF-kappa-B |
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| Thioredoxin 1 |
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| Overexpression in mice extends lifespan |
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| Synuclein |
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| Synuclein, gamma |
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| Mitogen activated protein kinase 9 |
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| Regulator of apoptosis and stress response |
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| Peroxisome proliferator activated receptor alpha |
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| Regulates fatty acid metabolism |
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| Forkhead box O3 |
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| Orthologs regulate aging in fruitflies and worms |
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| Epidermal growth factor receptor |
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| Regulator of cellular proliferation |
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| Topoisomerase (DNA) II alpha |
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| Topoisomerase indirectly linked to Wrn and Atm |
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| Heat shock protein 8 |
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| Heat shock 70 kDa protein 8 |
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| Transcription factor Dp 1 |
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| Involved in cell senescence, cell cycle, apoptosis |
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| Lamin B1 |
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| Part of nuclear lamina, interacts with Lmna1 |
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| 3-phosphoinositide dependent protein kinase-1 |
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| Phosphorylates and activates AKT1 |
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| Catalase |
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| Overexpression extends mouse lifespan |
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| CCAAT/enhancer binding protein alpha |
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| Replacing |
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| Valosin containing protein |
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| ER protein/regulator of protein aggregation |
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| Glutamate-cysteine ligase |
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| Overexpression in fruitflies extends lifespan |
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| Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase |
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| Involved in metabolism and insulin signaling |
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| Rho gtpase activating protein 1 |
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| Androgen receptor; dihydrotestosterone receptor |
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| Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 |
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| Repairs oxidative DNA damage |
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| Involved in DNA repair /chromatin remodeling |
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| Mitogen activated protein kinase 3 |
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| Involved in stress response signaling |
Genes are upregulated (positive fold-change values) or downregulated by CR, and are listed in the GenAge mouse and human database except for seven manually selected genes marked with an asterisk (*). Aging-related annotations come from GenAge [28] and other annotations come from Entrez Gene [73]. Fold change (FC) rank and statistical (Stat) ranks from SAM; separate statistical ranks are given for upregulated and downregulated genes.
Figure 2CR-induced phosphorylation changes in Eif4ebp1.
Western blots of unphosphorylated Eif4ebp1 (4EBP1) and Thr69 phosphorylated Eif4ebp1 (p4EBP1) for calorie restricted (CR) and high-calorie-fed (HIGHCAL) mice. Labels at top indicate individual mouse sample codes. CR, Calorie Restriction; FHC, Fixed High Calorie feeding; TAL, True Ad Libitum feeding. TAL1, TAL3, and TAL4 are from livers used to make the RNA pool TAL-P. CR1, CR7, and CR8 are from livers used to make the RNA pool CR-P1. CR4, CR5, and CR6 are from livers used to make the RNA pool CR-P2. FHC3 and FHC3B are separate samplings of the same liver.
Figure 3GO categories with largest relative fractions of upregulated or downregulated genes.
Each stacked bar graph displays the relative upregulated or downregulated fractions of the total number of genes (n = 100%) significantly altered by CR within a given GO category returned by FuncAssociate (adjusted p<0.05). The upregulated fraction is shown in red and the downregulated fraction is shown in blue.
Figure 4CR feminizes overall gene expression.
Fractional distributions of all genes changed by CR and which display sexually dimorphic expression in the data of Yang et al. Percent numbers are percent of all genes displaying both specific directional changes from CR and sexually dimorphic expression and corresponding numbers of genes in each of these four classes are given in parentheses. Deviation from expected frequencies was determined by a chi-square test for upregulated genes and separately for downregulated genes, at each q-value cutoff.
GO categories associated with groups of genes displaying CR-regulated and sex-biased expression.
| Genes UPREGULATED in CR | Genes DOWNREGULATED in CR | ||||
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| <0.001 | 31 | 0005840: ribosome | 0.001 | 42 | 0005783: endoplasmic reticulum |
| <0.001 | 64 | 0009058: biosynthesis | 0.023 | 32 | 0005794: Golgi apparatus |
| <0.001 | 217 | 0008152: metabolism | 0.031 | 199 | 0003824: catalytic activity |
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| - | - | NONE | <0.001 | 34 | 0006952: defense response |
Columns display GO attribute categories associated with genes upregulated or downregulated in CR (q<0.1) and also relatively upregulated in either female or male sex according to the data of Yang et al. [36]. Adjusted p-values and number of genes are given for each category.