| Literature DB >> 24606899 |
Samantha M Solon-Biet1, Aisling C McMahon2, J William O Ballard3, Kari Ruohonen4, Lindsay E Wu5, Victoria C Cogger2, Alessandra Warren2, Xin Huang2, Nicolas Pichaud3, Richard G Melvin6, Rahul Gokarn7, Mamdouh Khalil8, Nigel Turner9, Gregory J Cooney9, David A Sinclair10, David Raubenheimer11, David G Le Couteur12, Stephen J Simpson13.
Abstract
The fundamental questions of what represents a macronutritionally balanced diet and how this maintains health and longevity remain unanswered. Here, the Geometric Framework, a state-space nutritional modeling method, was used to measure interactive effects of dietary energy, protein, fat, and carbohydrate on food intake, cardiometabolic phenotype, and longevity in mice fed one of 25 diets ad libitum. Food intake was regulated primarily by protein and carbohydrate content. Longevity and health were optimized when protein was replaced with carbohydrate to limit compensatory feeding for protein and suppress protein intake. These consequences are associated with hepatic mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) activation and mitochondrial function and, in turn, related to circulating branched-chain amino acids and glucose. Calorie restriction achieved by high-protein diets or dietary dilution had no beneficial effects on lifespan. The results suggest that longevity can be extended in ad libitum-fed animals by manipulating the ratio of macronutrients to inhibit mTOR activation.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24606899 PMCID: PMC5087279 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2014.02.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Metab ISSN: 1550-4131 Impact factor: 27.287