| Literature DB >> 26221964 |
Marissa J Schafer1, Igor Dolgalev2, Melissa J Alldred3, Adriana Heguy4, Stephen D Ginsberg5.
Abstract
Calorie restriction (CR) enhances longevity and mitigates aging phenotypes in numerous species. Physiological responses to CR are cell-type specific and variable throughout the lifespan. However, the mosaic of molecular changes responsible for CR benefits remains unclear, particularly in brain regions susceptible to deterioration during aging. We examined the influence of long-term CR on the CA1 hippocampal region, a key learning and memory brain area that is vulnerable to age-related pathologies, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). Through mRNA sequencing and NanoString nCounter analysis, we demonstrate that one year of CR feeding suppresses age-dependent signatures of 882 genes functionally associated with synaptic transmission-related pathways, including calcium signaling, long-term potentiation (LTP), and Creb signaling in wild-type mice. By comparing the influence of CR on hippocampal CA1 region transcriptional profiles at younger-adult (5 months, 2.5 months of feeding) and older-adult (15 months, 12.5 months of feeding) timepoints, we identify conserved upregulation of proteome quality control and calcium buffering genes, including heat shock 70 kDa protein 1b (Hspa1b) and heat shock 70 kDa protein 5 (Hspa5), protein disulfide isomerase family A member 4 (Pdia4) and protein disulfide isomerase family A member 6 (Pdia6), and calreticulin (Calr). Expression levels of putative neuroprotective factors, klotho (Kl) and transthyretin (Ttr), are also elevated by CR in adulthood, although the global CR-specific expression profiles at younger and older timepoints are highly divergent. At a previously unachieved resolution, our results demonstrate conserved activation of neuroprotective gene signatures and broad CR-suppression of age-dependent hippocampal CA1 region expression changes, indicating that CR functionally maintains a more youthful transcriptional state within the hippocampal CA1 sector.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26221964 PMCID: PMC4519125 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0133923
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Average body weight following sustained 30% CR or AL feeding.
Beginning at approximately 2.5 months of age, wild-type female mice were maintained on 30% CR (purple) or AL (blue) diets and were sacrificed following 2.5 or 12.5 months of diet administration. Body weight was measured approximately twice weekly. Within the first 2 weeks of AL and CR feeding, mice maintained on the 30% CR diet lost an average of 12% of their body weight (t-test, p<0.001), which stabilized for the remainder of the study. For study days 1–85, n = 12–18, and for study days 85–365, n = 6–14, reflecting sacrifice of the first group of mice at 5 months of age; mean +/- SEM.
Fig 2Biological variance within mRNA sequencing condition groups.
The squared coefficient of variation (CV2) was plotted against Fragments Per Kilobase of exon per Million fragments mapped (log10FPKM), representing the total distribution of mRNA sequence reads for each condition group, which are depicted as follows, 5 months AL (coral), 5 months CR (green), 15 months AL (blue), and 15 months CR (purple).
Fig 3Differential gene expression via mRNA sequence analysis pairwise comparisons.
The total number of differentially expressed transcripts identified by total mRNA sequencing within each pairwise comparison are indicated, along with the log2 fold change (Log2FC) range and the number of upregulated (gray) and downregulated (white) targets (p<0.01, q<0.05).
Fig 4Long-term CR opposes age-dependent cellular functions and reverses age-dependent gene expression in the hippocampal CA1 sector.
(A) Comparative IPA was used to predict opposing functions activated (z-score ≥ 2) or inactivated (z-score ≥ -2) within the AL, 15 vs. 5 month and 15 month, CR vs. AL datasets. (B) 882 of the 887 gene changes common to the normal aging (AL, 15 vs. 5 month) and CR diet in aged CA1 (15 month CR vs. AL) datasets occur in the opposite direction. (C) Smoothed density representation of the normal aging changes (AL 15 month/AL 5 month) versus the CR diet in aged CA1 changes (CR 15 month/AL 15 month) for the 887 genes common to both datasets, illustrating CR reversal of age-dependent changes. (D) Heatmap depiction the 882 age-dependent expression changes suppressed by CR, comparing the mean log2 fold change values for each gene (p<0.01, q<0.05). (E) 558 transcriptional changes identified in the AL, 15 vs. 5 month and 15 month, CR vs. AL datasets were not identified in the CR, 15 month vs. AL, 5 month dataset, indicating no significant differences in expression levels for these genes. 329 differentially expressed genes were common to all 3 profiles, and 5 of these age-dependent changes were made more pronounced by CR. For the remaining 324 genes, CR 15 month expression levels were in between AL 5 month and AL 15 month levels (p<0.01, q<0.05). (F) Correlation of log2 fold change levels of 8 genes assessed by mRNA sequencing (p<0.01, q<0.05) and NanoString nCounter (p<0.05); Pearson correlation value (p<0.0001) is indicated; AL, 15 vs. 5 month (green) and 15 month, CR vs. AL (blue); dopamine receptor D5 (Drd5), receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor 1 (Ror1), klotho (Kl), heat shock 70 kDa protein 1B (Hspa1b), calreticulin (Calr), DnaJ (Hsp40) homolog subfamily A member 4 (Dnaja4), insulin-like growth factor binding protein 6 (Igfbp6), citron (Cit).
Canonical pathways functionally associated with CR-suppressed expression signature in older-adult hippocampal CA1.
(p<0.01, q<0.05).
| Canonical pathway | p-value | Altered genes / Known related genes | Upregulated by CR (Downregulated in normal aging) | Downregulated by CR (Upregulated in normal aging) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calcium signaling | 7.35E-06 | 22/140 (16%) | Atp2b1, Camk2b, Camkk1, Chrna5, Gria1, Grin2a, Grin2b, Ppp3ca, Ryr3, Trpc4 | Atp2b4, Camk1, Camk2d, Camk4, Chrna4, Chrna6, Chrnb3, Gria4, Itpr3, Mef2c, Slc8a3, Trpc3 |
| Axonal guidance signaling | 4.93E-05 | 38/352 (11%) | Actr2, Actr3, Arpc2, Arpc5, Epha4, Epha6, Epha7, Git1, Gnaq, Gng10, Gng7, Nrp1, Ppp3ca, Prkce, Prkcg, Sema3e, Sema5a, Slit1, Slit3, Wnt2 | Bmp7, Ecel1, Efna5, Epha8, Gnb4, L1cam, Ngef, Pak7, Plcb4, Plxna3, Plxnd1, Rnd1, Sema3a, Sema3f, Sema4a, Unc5d, Wnt10a, Wnt6 |
| Corticotropin releasing hormone signaling | 2.19E-04 | 15/96 (16%) | Arpc5, Elk1, Gnaq, Npr1, Prkce, Prkcg | Adcy8, Camk4, Crh, Crhr1, Fos, Gucy1a3, Itpr3, Mapk11, Mef2c |
| Synaptic long term potentiation | 3.47E-04 | 15/100 (15%) | Camk2b, Gnaq, Gria1, Grin2a, Grin2b, Grm1, Ppp3ca, Prkce, Prkcg | Adcy8, Camk2d, Camk4, Gria4, Itpr3, Plcb4 |
| Creb signaling in neurons | 5.12E-04 | 19/149 (13%) | Camk2b, Elk1, Gnaq, Gng10, Gng7, Gria1, Grin2a, Grin2b, Grm1, Prkce, Prkcg | Adcy8, Camk2d, Camk4, Gnb4, Gria4, Grik3, Itpr3, Plcb4 |
| G-protein coupled receptor signaling | 3.23E-04 | 26/228 (11%) | Drd5, Dusp6, Gnaq, Grm1, Htr1a, Htr4, Mc4r, Prkce, Prkcg, Ptk2b, Rasgrp1, Rgs14 | Adcy8, Adra1b, Adrb3, Camk2d, Camk4, Crhr1, Dusp1, Hrh1, Htr2c, Htr7, Oprk1, Pde4d, Plcb4, Ptgdr |
Fig 5CR upregulation of neuroprotective gene signatures is conserved at 5 and 15 months, despite divergent transcriptional profiles.
(A) 102 genes are common to both the 15 and 5 month CR vs. AL differential expression mRNA sequencing profiles. Of the 102 common genes, 70/102 (69%) of significant changes occur in the opposite direction. (B) Normalized age- and diet-dependent FPKM levels for select protein folding and calcium buffering genes (*p<0.01, q<0.05); heat shock 70 kDa protein 5 (Hspa5), heat shock 70 kDa protein 1B (Hspa1b), calreticulin (Calr). (C) Log2 fold change levels for the 32 conserved gene expression changes within 15 (blue) and 5 (red) month CR vs. AL expression profiles that occurred in the same direction are depicted (p<0.01, q<0.05).