| Literature DB >> 35822016 |
Daniella E Chusyd1, Nicole L Ackermans2,3, Steven N Austad4,5, Patrick R Hof2, Michelle M Mielke6, Chet C Sherwood7, David B Allison1.
Abstract
Elephants are large-brained, social mammals with a long lifespan. Studies of elephants can provide insight into the aging process, which may be relevant to understanding diseases that affect elderly humans because of their shared characteristics that have arisen through independent evolution. Elephants become sexually mature at 12 to 14 years of age and are known to live into, and past, their 7th decade of life. Because of their relatively long lifespans, elephants may have evolved mechanisms to counter age-associated morbidities, such as cancer and cognitive decline. Elephants rely heavily on their memory, and engage in multiple levels of competitive and collaborative relationships because they live in a fission-fusion system. Female matrilineal relatives and dependent offspring form tight family units led by an older-aged matriarch, who serves as the primary repository for social and ecological knowledge in the herd. Similar to humans, elephants demonstrate a dependence on social bonds, memory, and cognition to navigate their environment, behaviors that might be associated with specializations of brain anatomy. Compared with other mammals, the elephant hippocampus is proportionally smaller, whereas the temporal lobe is disproportionately large and expands laterally. The elephant cerebellum is also relatively enlarged, and the cerebral cortex is highly convoluted with numerous gyral folds, more than in humans. Last, an interesting characteristic unique to elephants is the presence of at least 20 copies of the TP53 tumor suppressor gene. Humans have only a single copy. TP53 encodes for the p53 protein, which is known to orchestrate cellular response to DNA damage. The effects of these multiple copies of TP53 are still being investigated, but it may be to protect elephants against multiple age-related diseases. For these reasons, among others, studies of elephants would be highly informative for aging research. Elephants present an underappreciated opportunity to explore further common principles of aging in a large-brained mammal with extended longevity. Such research can contribute to contextualizing our knowledge of age-associated morbidities in humans.Entities:
Keywords: aging; animal model; comparative aging research; elephant; gerontology; senescence
Year: 2021 PMID: 35822016 PMCID: PMC9261397 DOI: 10.3389/fragi.2021.726714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging ISSN: 2673-6217
Comparative life history of the Amboseli, Kenya, African savanna elephants and Hadza hunter-gatherers.
| African savanna elephant | Hadza hunter-gatherers | |
|---|---|---|
| Age at first birth (mean in years) (range) | 14 (9–22) | 19 (14–27) |
| Age at last birth (mean in years) | Majority continue to reproduce throughout life | 37 |
| Gestation (months) | 22 | 9 |
| Interbirth interval (years) | 4.5 | 3.5 |
| Mean life expectancy at birth, natural mortality only years) | Female: 46.7 | Female: 35.55 |
| Male: 37.4 | Male: 30.81 | |
| Mean life expectancy at age 20, natural mortality only (roughly sexual maturity; years) | Female: 37.9 | Female: 41.75 |
| Male: 31.1 | Male: 36.27 | |
| Maximum lifespan (years) | Female: >65 | Female: 86 |
| Male: ∼ 60 | Male: 83 |
The reason that elephants have a higher life expectancy compared to Hadza hunter-gathers at birth is because the Hadza experienced higher infant mortality.
FIGURE 1Microglia and phospho-tau detected in brain tissue collected from the cortex of a 51-year-old female Asian zoo elephant (Elephas maximus). Tissue stained using immunohistochemistry and counterstained with cresyl violet, (A) IBA1 (brown, 1:1,000, Fujifilm, 019–19,741), (B–D) CP13 (brown, 1:1,000, Gift from Dr. P. Davies). Images (A–D) were taken on an Axiophot brightfield microscope (Carl Zeiss Microscopy, Jena, Germany), with a 10x/0.32 Plan-Apochromat objective. (E–F) Tissue was stained with CP13 (red) and GFAP (green, 1:1,000, Abcam., ab68428) using immunofluorescence (note that blood vessels appear in green due to autofluorescence). Images (E–F) were taken on a CLSM 780 confocal microscope (Carl Zeiss Microscopy, Jena, Germany), using a 20x/0.8 DICII objective and DPSS 561–10 diode and Argon lasers at excitation wavelengths of 555 and 488 nm. Confocal stacks in layers II and III of the cerebral cortex were imaged at 512 × 512 pixel resolution with a z-step of 1 µm for a pinhole setting of 1 Airy unit. Images are presented as maximum intensity projections of the Z-stack, made using ZenBlue (version 3.3, Carl Zeiss Microscopy, Jena, Germany). All scale bars are 50 μm. In (A), microglia are evenly distributed and ramified without any activated (ameboid) forms. In (B, C), neurons stained with tau were found in layers III and II, respectively. In (D) tau “speckling” is visible in brown throughout layer III, and it is also visible in (E–F) in red. Images (E–F) show tau-positive neurons (thick arrowheads), and fibrils in red, and astrocytes in green (as well as autofluorescent blood vessels which are much thicker). Astrocytic end feet are visible around some blood vessels (thin arrows). In (F), astrocytes are indicated with stars, note their presence around the tau-positive neuron.
FIGURE 2(A) Serum and (B) plasma NfL concentrations in zoo Asian elephants (Elephas maximus, n = 21; n = 9, respectively). The four brown data points represent samples collected from the same elephant.