首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Lifelong treatment with atenolol decreases membrane fatty acid unsaturation and oxidative stress in heart and skeletal muscle mitochondria and improves immunity and behavior,without changing mice longevity
Authors:Alexia Gómez  Ines Sánchez‐Roman  Jose Gomez  Julia Cruces  Ianire Mate  Mónica Lopez‐Torres  Alba Naudi  Manuel Portero‐Otin  Reinald Pamplona  Monica De la Fuente  Gustavo Barja
Affiliation:1. Department of Animal Physiology‐II, Faculty of Biological Sciences, Complutense University of Madrid (UCM), , Madrid, Spain;2. Department of Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Lleida‐IRBLLEIDA, , Lleida, Spain
Abstract:
The membrane fatty acid unsaturation hypothesis of aging and longevity is experimentally tested for the first time in mammals. Lifelong treatment of mice with the β1‐blocker atenolol increased the amount of the extracellular‐signal‐regulated kinase signaling protein and successfully decreased one of the two traits appropriately correlating with animal longevity, the membrane fatty acid unsaturation degree of cardiac and skeletal muscle mitochondria, changing their lipid profile toward that present in much more longer‐lived mammals. This was mainly due to decreases in 22:6n‐3 and increases in 18:1n‐9 fatty acids. The atenolol treatment also lowered visceral adiposity (by 24%), decreased mitochondrial protein oxidative, glycoxidative, and lipoxidative damage in both organs, and lowered oxidative damage in heart mitochondrial DNA. Atenolol also improved various immune (chemotaxis and natural killer activities) and behavioral functions (equilibrium, motor coordination, and muscular vigor). It also totally or partially prevented the aging‐related detrimental changes observed in mitochondrial membrane unsaturation, protein oxidative modifications, and immune and behavioral functions, without changing longevity. The controls reached 3.93 years of age, a substantially higher maximum longevity than the best previously described for this strain (3.0 years). Side effects of the drug could have masked a likely lowering of the endogenous aging rate induced by the decrease in membrane fatty acid unsaturation. We conclude that it is atenolol that failed to increase longevity, and likely not the decrease in membrane unsaturation induced by the drug.
Keywords:aging  atenolol  fatty acid unsaturation  heart rate  longevity  oxidative stress
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号