Growth signaling promotes chronological aging in budding yeast by inducing superoxide anions that inhibit quiescence.

Authors: Weinberger M; Mesquita A; Caroll T; Marks L; Yang H; Zhang Z; Ludovico P; Burhans WC
Year: 2010
Journal: Aging
Abstract: Inhibition of growth signaling pathways protects against aging and age-related diseases in parallel with reduced oxidative stress. The relationships between growth signaling, oxidative stress and aging remain unclear. Here we report that in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, alterations in growth signaling pathways impact levels of superoxide anions that promote chronological aging and inhibit growth arrest of stationary phase cells in G0/G1. Factors that decrease intracellular superoxide anions in parallel with enhanced longevity and more efficient G0/G1 arrest include genetic inactivation of growth signaling pathways that inhibit Rim15p, which activates oxidative stress responses, and downregulation of these pathways by caloric restriction. Caloric restriction also reduces superoxide anions independently of Rim15p by elevating levels of H(2)O(2), which activates superoxide dismutases. In contrast, high glucose or mutations that activate growth signaling accelerate chronological aging in parallel with increased superoxide anions and reduced efficiency of stationary phase G0/G1 arrest. High glucose also activates DNA damage responses and preferentially kills stationary phase cells that fail to arrest growth in G0/G1. These findings suggest that growth signaling promotes chronological aging in budding yeast by elevating superoxide anions that inhibit quiescence and induce DNA replication stress. A similar mechanism likely contributes to aging and age-related diseases in complex eukaryotes.
Reference

Integration:

Created on Nov. 5, 2012, 4:44 p.m.
Not linked
Integrated: False

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Species: Budding yeast

Experiments: 0
Interventions:
  • CTT1 deletion
  • Buffering pH to 6.0
  • GSH Treatment
  • CTA1 Deletion
  • SIC1 Deletion
  • High Glucose
  • N-acetylcysteine Treatment
  • PDE2 Deletion
  • SNF1 deletion
  • SOD2 deletion
  • SCH9 Deletion
  • RIM15 deletion
  • RAS2 deletion

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