Regulation of C. elegans Life-Span by Insulinlike Signaling in the Nervous System

CA Wolkow, KD Kimura, MS Lee, G Ruvkun - Science, 2000 - science.org
Science, 2000science.org
An insulinlike signaling pathway controls Caenorhabditis elegans aging, metabolism, and
development. Mutations in the daf-2 insulin receptor–like gene or the downstream age-1
phosphoinositide 3-kinase gene extend adult life-span by two-to threefold. To identify
tissues where this pathway regulates aging and metabolism, we restored daf-2 pathway
signaling to only neurons, muscle, or intestine. Insulinlike signaling in neurons alone was
sufficient to specify wild-type life-span, but muscle or intestinal signaling was not. However …
An insulinlike signaling pathway controlsCaenorhabditis elegans aging, metabolism, and development. Mutations in the daf-2 insulin receptor–like gene or the downstream age-1 phosphoinositide 3-kinase gene extend adult life-span by two- to threefold. To identify tissues where this pathway regulates aging and metabolism, we restored daf-2pathway signaling to only neurons, muscle, or intestine. Insulinlike signaling in neurons alone was sufficient to specify wild-type life-span, but muscle or intestinal signaling was not. However, restoring daf-2 pathway signaling to muscle rescued metabolic defects, thus decoupling regulation of life-span and metabolism. These findings point to the nervous system as a central regulator of animal longevity.
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