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1.
2.
To demonstrate that an uncoupling of respiration and phosphorylation, measured in vitro, reflects an in vivo situation, we badly need in vivo measurements of some uncoupling-linked parameters. The importance of this assertion is illustrated by studies of Barja and co-workers. A lower rate of H(2)O(2) production by mitochondria isolated from long-lived birds compared with short-lived mammals of the same body weight (see publications by Barja's and Sohal's groups) could be explained by (i) an in vivo difference or (ii) an in vitro artefact. In both cases, the reason for lower H(2)O(2) production may well be the same, i.e. a mild uncoupling of respiration in avian mitochondria showing lowered respiratory control. Again, this should be due to an in vivo operation of some bird-specific natural uncouplers (the first case) or stronger in vitro damage to the avian mitochondria during their isolation and incubation (the second). The latter possibility seemed more probable when Barja and co-workers revealed that the level of antioxidants in birds is lower than in mammals. However, further studies by the same group showed that the degree of unsaturation of fatty acids in birds is lower than in mammals, indicating a greater resistance of avian mitochondria to oxidative damage in vitro. Indeed, it was found that lipid peroxidation in isolated avian mitochondria occurs at a much lower rate than in mammals. More importantly, the in vivo level of peroxidation of lipids and proteins appears to be lower in birds than in mammals. Thus, it seems probable that longer lifespan of birds really does correlate with a slower rate of production of H2O2 by mitochondria in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Vascular aging is characterized by decreased nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability, oxidative stress, and enhanced apoptotic cell death. We hypothesized that interspecies comparative assessment of vascular function among rodents with disparate longevity may offer insight into the mechanisms determining successful vascular aging. We focused on four rodents that show approximately an order of magnitude range in maximum longevity (ML). The naked mole rat (NMR; Heterocephalus glaber) is the longest-living rodent known (ML > 28 yr), Damara mole rats (DMRs, Cryptomys damarensis; ML approximately 16 yr) and guinea pigs (GPs, Cavia porcellus; ML approximately 6 yr) have intermediate longevity, whereas laboratory mice are short living (ML approximately 3.5 yr). We compared interspecies differences in endothelial function, O(2)(-)* and H(2)O(2) production, and resistance to apoptotic stimuli in blood vessels. Sensitivity to acetylcholine-induced, NO-mediated relaxation was smaller in carotid arteries from NMRs, GPs, and DMRs than in mouse vessels. Measurements of production of O(2)(-)* (lucigenin chemiluminescence and ethidium bromide fluorescence) and H(2)O(2) (dichlorofluorescein fluorescence) showed that free radical production in vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells is comparable in vessels of the three longer-living species and in arteries of shorter-living mice. In mouse arteries, H(2)O(2) (from 10(-6) to 10(-3) mol/l) and heat exposure (42 degrees C for 15-45 min) enhanced apoptotic cell death, as indicated by an increased DNA fragmentation rate and increased caspase 3/7 activity. In NMR vessels, only the highest doses of H(2)O(2) enhanced apoptotic cell death, whereas heat exposure did not increase DNA fragmentation rate. Interspecies comparison showed there is a negative correlation between H(2)O(2)-induced apoptotic cell death and ML. Thus endothelial vasodilator function and vascular production of reactive oxygen species do not correlate with maximal lifespan, whereas increased lifespan potential is associated with an increased vascular resistance to proapoptotic stimuli.  相似文献   

4.
Mitochondrially encoded cysteine predicts animal lifespan   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Moosmann B  Behl C 《Aging cell》2008,7(1):32-46
The role of genetic factors in the determination of lifespan is undisputed. However, numerous successful efforts to identify individual genetic modulators of longevity have not yielded yet a quantitative measure to estimate the lifespan of a species from scratch, merely based on its genomic constitution. Here, we report on a meta-examination of genome sequences from 248 animal species with known maximum lifespan, including mammals, birds, fish, insects, and helminths. Our analysis reveals that the frequency with which cysteine is encoded by mitochondrial DNA is a specific and phylogenetically ubiquitous molecular indicator of aerobic longevity: long-lived species synthesize respiratory chain complexes which are depleted of cysteine. Cysteine depletion was also found on a proteome-wide scale in aerobic versus anaerobic bacteria, archaea, and unicellular eukaryotes; in mitochondrial versus hydrogenosomal sequences; and in the mitochondria of free-living, aerobic versus anaerobic–parasitic worms. The association of longevity with mitochondrial cysteine depletion persisted after correction for body mass and phylogenetic interdependence, but it was uncoupled in helminthic species with predominantly anaerobic lifestyle. We conclude that protein-coding genes on mitochondrial DNA constitute a quantitative trait locus for aerobic longevity, wherein the oxidation of mitochondrially translated cysteine mediates the coupling of trait and locus. These results provide distinct support for the free radical theory of aging.  相似文献   

5.
Mitochondrial electron transport is a major source of reactive oxygen species (ROS) during cardiac ischemia and reperfusion. In the isolated rabbit heart, 30 and 45 min of ischemia decrease the contents of cardiolipin and cytochrome c in subsarcolemmal mitochondria (SSM) located beneath the plasma membrane. In contrast, interfibrillar mitochondria (IFM) in the interior of the myocyte do not sustain a decrease in cardiolipin. We proposed that the depletion of cardiolipin and the accompanying cytochrome c loss during ischemia were critical events that amplified ROS production by mitochondria. The total production of H2O2 was measured in submitochondrial particles (SMP) prepared from rabbit heart SSM and IFM after 0, 15, 30, and 45 min of ischemia. With NADH as substrate, total H2O2 production was increased only in SMP from SSM after 30 and 45 min ischemia, when ischemia decreased the content of cardiolipin and cytochrome c. In contrast, ischemia did not augment H2O2 generation in SMP from IFM with preserved cardiolipin and cytochrome c content. Thus, during the evolution of ischemic injury, H2O2 production from the electron transport chain increased after depletion of cardiolipin and the loss of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

6.
The maximal lifespan of Anthropoid primates (monkeys, apes and humans) exceed the lifespan of most other mammals of equal body mass. Unexpectedly, their exceptional longevity is associated with exceptionally high metabolic rates, in apparent contradiction to the Free Radical Theory of Aging. It was therefore suggested that in anthropoid primates (and several other taxa of mammals and birds) the mitochondrial electron transport complexes evolved to modify the relationship between basal electron transport and superoxide generation to allow for the evolution of exceptional longevity. Cytochrome b, the core protein of the bc1 complex is a major source of superoxide. The amino-acid sequence of cytochrome b evolved much faster in anthropoid than in prosimian primates, and most other mammals, resulting in a large change in the amino-acids composition of the protein. As a result of these changes cytochrome b in anthropoid primates is significantly less hydrophobic and contains more polar residues than other primates and most other mammals. Most of these changes are clustered around the reduction site of uboiquinone. In particular a key positively charged residue, arginine 313, that interacts with propionate D of heme bH, and thus raises its redox potential, is substituted in anthropoid primates with the neutral residue glutamine, most likely resulting in a lower redox potential of heme bH and faster reduction of ubiquinone at high proton motive force. It is suggested that these changes contribute to the observed increased rates of basal metabolism and reduce the rates of superoxide production, thus allowing for increased lifespan.  相似文献   

7.
The enormous mammal’s lifespan variation is the result of each species’ adaptations to their own biological trade-offs and ecological conditions. Comparative genomics have demonstrated that genomic factors underlying both, species lifespans and longevity of individuals, are in part shared across the tree of life. Here, we compared protein-coding regions across the mammalian phylogeny to detect individual amino acid (AA) changes shared by the most long-lived mammals and genes whose rates of protein evolution correlate with longevity. We discovered a total of 2,737 AA in 2,004 genes that distinguish long- and short-lived mammals, significantly more than expected by chance (P = 0.003). These genes belong to pathways involved in regulating lifespan, such as inflammatory response and hemostasis. Among them, a total 1,157 AA showed a significant association with maximum lifespan in a phylogenetic test. Interestingly, most of the detected AA positions do not vary in extant human populations (81.2%) or have allele frequencies below 1% (99.78%). Consequently, almost none of these putatively important variants could have been detected by genome-wide association studies, suggesting that comparative genomics can be used to complement and enhance interpretation of human genome-wide association studies. Additionally, we identified four more genes whose rate of protein evolution correlated with longevity in mammals. Finally, we show that the human longevity-associated proteins are significantly more stable than the orthologous proteins from short-lived mammals, strongly suggesting that general protein stability is linked to increased lifespan.  相似文献   

8.
Cardiac ischemia decreases complex III activity, cytochrome c content, and respiration through cytochrome oxidase in subsarcolemmal mitochondria (SSM) and interfibrillar mitochondria (IFM). The reversible blockade of electron transport with amobarbital during ischemia protects mitochondrial respiration and decreases myocardial injury during reperfusion. These findings support that mitochondrial damage occurs during ischemia and contributes to myocardial injury during reperfusion. The current study addressed whether ischemic damage to the electron transport chain (ETC) increased the net production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) from mitochondria. SSM and IFM were isolated from 6-mo-old Fisher 344 rat hearts following 25 min global ischemia or following 40 min of perfusion alone as controls. H(2)O(2) release from SSM and IFM was measured using the amplex red assay. With glutamate as a complex I substrate, the net production of H(2)O(2) was increased by 178 +/- 14% and 179 +/- 17% in SSM and IFM (n = 9), respectively, following ischemia compared with controls (n = 8). With succinate as substrate in the presence of rotenone, H(2)O(2) increased by 272 +/- 22% and 171 +/- 21% in SSM and IFM, respectively, after ischemia. Inhibitors of electron transport were used to assess maximal ROS production. Inhibition of complex I with rotenone increased H(2)O(2) production by 179 +/- 24% and 155 +/- 14% in SSM and IFM, respectively, following ischemia. Ischemia also increased the antimycin A-stimulated production of H(2)O(2) from complex III. Thus ischemic damage to the ETC increased both the capacity and the net production of H(2)O(2) from complex I and complex III and sets the stage for an increase in ROS production during reperfusion as a mechanism of cardiac injury.  相似文献   

9.
The mitochondrial respiratory chain is a major source of reactive oxygen species (ROS) under pathological conditions including myocardial ischemia and reperfusion. Limitation of electron transport by the inhibitor rotenone immediately before ischemia decreases the production of ROS in cardiac myocytes and reduces damage to mitochondria. We asked if ROS generation by intact mitochondria during the oxidation of complex I substrates (glutamate, pyruvate/malate) occurred from complex I or III. ROS production by mitochondria of Sprague-Dawley rat hearts and corresponding submitochondrial particles was studied. ROS were measured as H2O2 using the amplex red assay. In mitochondria oxidizing complex I substrates, rotenone inhibition did not increase H2O2. Oxidation of complex I or II substrates in the presence of antimycin A markedly increased H2O2. Rotenone prevented antimycin A-induced H2O2 production in mitochondria with complex I substrates but not with complex II substrates. Catalase scavenged H2O2. In contrast to intact mitochondria, blockade of complex I with rotenone markedly increased H2O2 production from submitochondrial particles oxidizing the complex I substrate NADH. ROS are produced from complex I by the NADH dehydrogenase located in the matrix side of the inner membrane and are dissipated in mitochondria by matrix antioxidant defense. However, in submitochondrial particles devoid of antioxidant defense ROS from complex I are available for detection. In mitochondria, complex III is the principal site for ROS generation during the oxidation of complex I substrates, and rotenone protects by limiting electron flow into complex III.  相似文献   

10.
Mitochondrial production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) at Complex I of the electron transport chain is implicated in the etiology of neural cell death in acute and chronic neurodegenerative disorders. However, little is known regarding the regulation of mitochondrial ROS production by NADH-linked respiratory substrates under physiologically realistic conditions in the absence of respiratory chain inhibitors. This study used Amplex Red fluorescence measurements of H2O2 to test the hypothesis that ROS production by isolated brain mitochondria is regulated by membrane potential (DeltaPsi) and NAD(P)H redox state. DeltaPsi was monitored by following the medium concentration of the lipophilic cation tetraphenylphosphonium with a selective electrode. NAD(P)H autofluorescence was used to monitor NAD(P)H redox state. While the rate of H2O2 production was closely related to DeltaPsi and the level of NAD(P)H reduction at high values of DeltaPsi, 30% of the maximal rate of H2O2 formation was still observed in the presence of uncoupler (p-trifluoromethoxycarbonylcyanide phenylhydrazone) concentrations that provided for maximum depolarization of DeltaPsi and oxidation of NAD(P)H. Our findings indicate that ROS production by mitochondria oxidizing physiological NADH-dependent substrates is regulated by DeltaPsi and by the NAD(P)H redox state over ranges consistent with those that exist at different levels of cellular energy demand.  相似文献   

11.
Life history,ecology and longevity in bats   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4  
Wilkinson GS  South JM 《Aging cell》2002,1(2):124-131
The evolutionary theory of aging predicts that life span should decrease in response to the amount of mortality caused by extrinsic sources. Using this prediction, we selected six life history and ecological factors to use in a comparative analysis of longevity among 64 bat species. On average, the maximum recorded life span of a bat is 3.5 times greater than a non-flying placental mammal of similar size. Records of individuals surviving more than 30 years in the wild now exist for five species. Univariate and multivariate analyses of species data, as well as of phylogenetically independent contrasts obtained using a supertree of Chiroptera, reveal that bat life span significantly increases with hibernation, body mass and occasional cave use, but decreases with reproductive rate and is not influenced by diet, colony size or the source of the record. These results are largely consistent with extrinsic mortality risk acting as a determinant of bat longevity. Nevertheless, the strong association between life span and both reproductive rate and hibernation also suggests that bat longevity is strongly influenced by seasonal allocation of non-renewable resources to reproduction. We speculate that hibernation may provide a natural example of caloric restriction, which is known to increase longevity in other mammals.  相似文献   

12.
Fibroblast cell lines were developed from skin biopsies of eight species of wild-trapped rodents, one species of bat, and a group of genetically heterogeneous laboratory mice. Each cell line was tested in vitro for their resistance to six varieties of lethal stress, as well as for resistance to the nonlethal metabolic effects of the mitochondrial inhibitor rotenone and of culture at very low glucose levels. Standard linear regression of species-specific lifespan against each species mean stress resistance showed that longevity was associated with resistance to death induced by cadmium and hydrogen peroxide, as well as with resistance to rotenone inhibition. A multilevel regression method supported these associations, and suggested a similar association for resistance to heat stress. Regressions for resistance to cadmium, peroxide, heat, and rotenone remained significant after various statistical adjustments for body weight. In contrast, cells from longer-lived species did not show significantly greater resistance to ultraviolet light, paraquat, or the DNA alkylating agent methylmethanesulfonate. There was a strong correlation between species longevity and resistance to the metabolic effects of low-glucose medium among the rodent cell lines, but this test did not distinguish mice and rats from the much longer-lived little brown bat. These results are consistent with the idea that evolution of long-lived species may require development of cellular resistance to several forms of lethal injury, and provide justification for evaluation of similar properties in a much wider range of mammals and bird species.  相似文献   

13.
Valencak TG  Ruf T 《Aging cell》2007,6(1):15-25
Although generally considered as beneficial components of dietary fats, polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) have been suspected to compromise maximum lifespan (MLSP) in mammals. Specifically, high amounts of phospholipid PUFAs are thought to impair lifespan due to an increase in the susceptibility of membranes to lipid peroxidation and its damaging effect on cellular molecules. Also, there is evidence from in vitro studies suggesting that highly unsaturated PUFAs elevate basal metabolic rate (BMR). Previous comparative studies in this context were based on small sample sizes, however, and, except for one study, failed to address possible confounding influences of body weight and taxonomic relations between species. Therefore, we determined phospholipid membrane composition in skeletal muscle from 42 mammalian species to test for a relation with published data on MLSP, and with literature data on BMR (30 species). Using statistical models that adjust for the effects of body weight and phylogeny, we found that among mammals, MLSP indeed decreases as the ratio of n-3 to n-6 PUFAs increases. In contrast to previous studies, we found, however, no relation between MLSP and either membrane unsaturation (i.e. PUFA content or number of double bonds) or to the very long-chain, highly unsaturated docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). Similarly, our data set gave no evidence for any notable relation between muscle phospholipid fatty acid composition and BMR, or MLSP and BMR in mammals. These results contradict the 'membrane pacemaker theory of aging', that is, the concept of a direct link between high amounts of membrane PUFAs, elevated BMR, and thus, impaired longevity.  相似文献   

14.
Paraquat (PQ(2+)) is a prototypic toxin known to exert injurious effects through oxidative stress and bears a structural similarity to the Parkinson disease toxicant, 1-methyl-4-pheynlpyridinium. The cellular sources of PQ(2+)-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, specifically in neuronal tissue, remain to be identified. The goal of this study was to determine the involvement of brain mitochondria in PQ(2+)-induced ROS production. Highly purified rat brain mitochondria were obtained using a Percoll density gradient method. PQ(2+)-induced hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) production was measured by fluorometric and polarographic methods. The production of H(2)O(2) was evaluated in the presence of inhibitors and modulators of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The results presented here suggest that in the rat brain, (a) mitochondria are a principal cellular site of PQ(2+)-induced H(2)O(2) production, (b) PQ(2+)-induced H(2)O(2) production requires the presence of respiratory substrates, (c) complex III of the electron transport chain is centrally involved in H(2)O(2) production by PQ(2+), and (d) the mechanism by which PQ(2+) generates H(2)O(2) depends on the mitochondrial inner transmembrane potential. These observations were further confirmed by measuring PQ(2+)-induced H(2)O(2) production in primary neuronal cells derived from the midbrain. These findings shed light on the mechanism through which mitochondria may contribute to ROS production by other environmental and endogenous redox cycling agents implicated in Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

15.
The most studied comparison of aging and maximum lifespan potential (MLSP) among endotherms involves the 7-fold longevity difference between rats (MLSP 5y) and pigeons (MLSP 35y). A widely accepted theory explaining MLSP differences between species is the oxidative stress theory, which purports that reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced during mitochondrial respiration damage bio-molecules and eventually lead to the breakdown of regulatory systems and consequent death. Previous rat-pigeon studies compared only aspects of the oxidative stress theory and most concluded that the lower mitochondrial superoxide production of pigeons compared to rats was responsible for their much greater longevity. This conclusion is based mainly on data from one tissue (the heart) using one mitochondrial substrate (succinate). Studies on heart mitochondria using pyruvate as a mitochondrial substrate gave contradictory results. We believe the conclusion that birds produce less mitochondrial superoxide than mammals is unwarranted. We have revisited the rat-pigeon comparison in the most comprehensive manner to date. We have measured superoxide production (by heart, skeletal muscle and liver mitochondria), five different antioxidants in plasma, three tissues and mitochondria, membrane fatty acid composition (in seven tissues and three mitochondria), and biomarkers of oxidative damage. The only substantial and consistent difference that we have observed between rats and pigeons is their membrane fatty acid composition, with rats having membranes that are more susceptible to damage. This suggests that, although there was no difference in superoxide production, there is likely a much greater production of lipid-based ROS in the rat. We conclude that the differences in superoxide production reported previously were due to the arbitrary selection of heart muscle to source mitochondria and the provision of succinate. Had mitochondria been harvested from other tissues or other relevant mitochondrial metabolic substrates been used, then very different conclusions regarding differences in oxidative stress would have been reached.  相似文献   

16.
Brain size of vertebrates has long been recognized to evolve in close association with basic life‐history traits, including lifespan. According to the cognitive buffer hypothesis, large brains facilitate the construction of behavioral responses against novel socioecological challenges through general cognitive processes, which should reduce mortality and increase lifespan. While the occurrence of brain size–lifespan correlation has been well documented in mammals, much less evidence exists for a robust link between brain size and longevity in birds. The aim of this study was to use phylogenetically controlled comparative approach to test for the relationship between brain size and longevity among 384 avian species from 23 orders. We used maximum lifespan and maximum reproductive lifespan as the measures of longevity and accounted for a set of possible confounding effects, such as allometry, sampling effort, geographic patterns, and life‐history components (clutch size, incubation length, and mode of development). We found that both measures of longevity positively correlated with relative (residual) brain size. We also showed that major diversification of brain size preceded diversification of longevity in avian evolution. In contrast to previous findings, the effect of brain size on longevity was consistent across lineages with different development patterns, although the relatively low strength of this correlation could likely be attributed to the ubiquity of allomaternal care associated with the altricial mode of development. Our study indicates that the positive relationship between brain size and longevity in birds may be more general than previously thought.  相似文献   

17.
Vascular aging is characterized by increased oxidative stress, impaired nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability and enhanced apoptotic cell death. The oxidative stress hypothesis of aging predicts that vascular cells of long-lived species exhibit lower production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and/or superior resistance to oxidative stress. We tested this hypothesis using two taxonomically related rodents, the white-footed mouse (Peromyscus leucopus) and the house mouse (Mus musculus), that show a more than twofold difference in maximum lifespan potential (MLSP = 8 and 3.5 years, respectively). We compared interspecies differences in endothelial superoxide (O2-) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production, NAD(P)H oxidase activity, mitochondrial ROS generation, expression of pro- and antioxidant enzymes, NO production, and resistance to oxidative stress-induced apoptosis. In aortas of P. leucopus, NAD(P)H oxidase expression and activity, endothelial and H2O2 production, and ROS generation by mitochondria were less than in mouse vessels. In P. leucopus, there was a more abundant expression of catalase, glutathione peroxidase 1 and hemeoxygenase-1, whereas expression of Cu/Zn-SOD and Mn-SOD was similar in both species. NO production and endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression was greater in P. leucopus. In mouse aortas, treatment with oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL) elicited substantial oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction and endothelial apoptosis (assessed by TUNEL assay, DNA fragmentation and caspase 3 activity assays). According to our prediction, vessels of P. leucopus were more resistant to the proapoptotic effects of oxidative stressors (oxLDL and H2O2). Primary fibroblasts from P. leucopus also exhibited less H2O2-induced DNA damage (comet assay) than mouse cells. Thus, increased lifespan potential in P. leucopus is associated with a decreased cellular ROS generation and increased oxidative stress resistance, which accords with the prediction of the oxidative stress hypothesis of aging.  相似文献   

18.
Oxidative stress is reputed to be a significant contributor to the aging process and a key factor affecting species longevity. The tremendous natural variation in maximum species lifespan may be due to interspecific differences in reactive oxygen species generation, antioxidant defenses and/or levels of accrued oxidative damage to cellular macromolecules (such as DNA, lipids and proteins). The present study tests if the exceptional longevity of the longest living (> 28.3 years) rodent species known, the naked mole-rat (NMR, Heterocephalus glaber ), is associated with attenuated levels of oxidative stress. We compare antioxidant defenses (reduced glutathione, GSH), redox status (GSH/GSSG), as well as lipid (malondialdehyde and isoprostanes), DNA (8-OHdG), and protein (carbonyls) oxidation levels in urine and various tissues from both mole-rats and similar-sized mice. Significantly lower GSH and GSH/GSSG in mole-rats indicate poorer antioxidant capacity and a surprisingly more pro-oxidative cellular environment, manifested by 10-fold higher levels of in vivo lipid peroxidation. Furthermore, mole-rats exhibit greater levels of accrued oxidative damage to lipids (twofold), DNA (~two to eight times) and proteins (1.5 to 2-fold) than physiologically age-matched mice, and equal to that of same-aged mice. Given that NMRs live an order of magnitude longer than predicted based on their body size, our findings strongly suggest that mechanisms other than attenuated oxidative stress explain the impressive longevity of this species.  相似文献   

19.
20.
More than 100 years ago, Max Rubner combined the fact that both metabolic rate and longevity of mammals varies with body size to calculate that "life energy potential" (lifetime energy turnover per kilogram) was relatively constant. This calculation linked longevity to aerobic metabolism which in turn led to the "rate-of-living" and ultimately the "oxidative stress" theories of aging. However, the link between metabolic rate and longevity is imperfect. Although unknown in Rubner's time, one aspect of body composition of mammals also varies with body size, namely the fatty acid composition of membranes. Fatty acids vary dramatically in their susceptibility to peroxidation and the products of lipid peroxidation are very powerful reactive molecules that damage other cellular molecules. The "membrane pacemaker" modification of the "oxidative stress" theory of aging proposes that fatty acid composition of membranes, via its influence on peroxidation of lipids, is an important determinant of lifespan (and a link between metabolism and longevity). The relationship between membrane fatty acid composition and longevity is discussed for (1) mammals of different body size, (2) birds of different body size, (3) mammals and birds that are exceptionally long-living for their size, (4) strains of mice that vary in longevity, (5) calorie-restriction extension of longevity in rodents, (6) differences in longevity between queen and worker honeybees, and (7) variation in longevity among humans. Most of these comparisons support an important role for membrane fatty acid composition in the determination of longevity. It is apparent that membrane composition is regulated for each species. Provided the diet is not deficient in polyunsaturated fat, it has minimal influence on a species' membrane fatty acid composition and likely also on it's maximum longevity. The exceptional longevity of Homo sapiens combined with the limited knowledge of the fatty acid composition of human tissues support the potential importance of mitochondrial membranes in determination of longevity.  相似文献   

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