| Literature DB >> 30534551 |
Abstract
Caenorhabditis elegans has been used in research for years to clarify the genetic cascades and molecular mechanisms of aging, longevity, and health span. Health span is closely related to frailty; however, frailty has a different concept and is evaluated using various parameters in humans, such as Fried's Frailty Criteria. The C. elegans model has several advantages when performing a chemical screen to identify drug candidates. Several mouse models of frailty were recently developed, including a homozygous IL-10 knockout. These mouse models are useful for understanding human frailty; however, they are not appropriate for primary drug screening because they require large spaces, expensive cost, and time consuming assessments. Therefore, a combination of these models may be a promising tool for discovering drugs and understanding the mechanisms of frailty. In addition, natural products, and herbs are attractive sources of novel drugs with pharmacological activity and low toxicity, in fact, over 60% of currently-available drugs are estimated to be related to natural compounds. In this review, the possibility of identifying natural agents (i.e., herb extracts and compounds) that could improve frailty are proposed, and the advantages and limitations of these models are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Caenorhabditis elegans; drug screening; frailty; model animal; natural herbs
Year: 2018 PMID: 30534551 PMCID: PMC6275236 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2018.00111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Aging modulating compounds. 1; Metformin (biguanide antiglycemic agent, AMPK activation), 2; Rapamycin (immune suppressing agent, mTOR inhibitor), 3; Resveratrol (polyphenol, sirtuin activator), 4; Spermidine (polyamine, induction of autophagy), 5; Aspirin (COX inhibitor, antithrombosis, antioxidant), 6; Masoprocol (catechol, antioxidant, antiinflammation).
Feature of C. elegans.
| •Multicellular animal |
| •Small size (~1 mm in length) |
| •Short life cycle (~3 days) |
| •High progeny production (~250 offspring in ~3 days) |
| •Conservation of cellular processes and genes |
| (Homologs have been identified for 60–80% of human genes) |
| •ADMET characteristics |
| •Low husbandry and animal costs |
| •Simple and high-throughput screening assays |
| •Availability of mutant and transgenic strains |
Scheme 1Plausible work flow for anti-frailty agents.