| Literature DB >> 33876723 |
Michael A Petr1, Irene Alfaras2, Melissa Krawcyzk3, Woei-Nan Bair4, Sarah J Mitchell5, Christopher H Morrell3, Stephanie A Studenski6, Nathan L Price7, Kenneth W Fishbein8, Richard G Spencer9, Morten Scheibye-Knudsen1, Edward G Lakatta3, Luigi Ferrucci10, Miguel A Aon11, Michel Bernier11, Rafael de Cabo11.
Abstract
Aging is associated with distinct phenotypical, physiological, and functional changes, leading to disease and death. The progression of aging-related traits varies widely among individuals, influenced by their environment, lifestyle, and genetics. In this study, we conducted physiologic and functional tests cross-sectionally throughout the entire lifespan of male C57BL/6N mice. In parallel, metabolomics analyses in serum, brain, liver, heart, and skeletal muscle were also performed to identify signatures associated with frailty and age-dependent functional decline. Our findings indicate that declines in gait speed as a function of age and frailty are associated with a dramatic increase in the energetic cost of physical activity and decreases in working capacity. Aging and functional decline prompt organs to rewire their metabolism and substrate selection and towards redox-related pathways, mainly in liver and heart. Collectively, the data provide a framework to further understand and characterize processes of aging at the individual organism and organ levels.Entities:
Keywords: computational biology; mouse; systems biology
Year: 2021 PMID: 33876723 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.62952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140