Study identifies gene linked to longer
lifespan
May 2, 2007
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists have known for seven decades that
mice, dogs, fruit flies and other animals given diets bordering on
starvation tended to live up to 40 percent longer than their
better-fed cousins.
Now they think they know why.
They identified a gene in roundworms on Wednesday
that directly links calorie restriction to longer lifespan.
The researchers, led by Andrew Dillin of the Salk
Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California, said a
gene called pha-4 plays a role in gut development in embryonic worms
but in adults is associated with calorie-restricted longevity.
Dillin said it is unclear whether similar genes
may play a similar role in humans.
People have three genes very much like the worm’s
pha-4. They are related to glucagon, a pancreatic hormone that
increases blood sugar concentration and maintains the body’s energy
balance, particularly during fasting, they said.
Pinpointing the worm gene might open the door to
drugs that imitate the effects of calorie restriction and could
allow people to live longer without following such a severely
restrictive diet, the researchers report in this week’s issue of the
journal Nature.
“We don’t know yet whether or not dietary
restriction will increase longevity in humans,” Dillin said in a
conference call with reporters. Experts are testing the diets in
monkeys.
“There are several people that are actively doing
this voluntarily,” Dillin added.
“But there is a primate study that’s going on
that’s around 35 years into it, and it looks like the primates are
going to respond very well to reduced food intake and actually live
longer.”
Dillin said it usually takes a 50 to 70 percent
reduction in normal food intake to yield longer lifespan in animals.
“If you reduce food too much, you’re going to go
toward starvation and actually live shorter,” Dillin said.
“If you overeat—have the Big Mac diet,
high-calorie content—you’re going to come to obesity and have a
short life span as well. So dietary restriction is really a sweet
spot in between the two.”
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