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Disruption of Growth Hormone Receptor Prevents Calorie Restriction from Improving Insulin Action and Longevity

Most mutations that delay aging and prolong lifespan in the mouse are related to somatotropic and/or insulin signaling. Calorie restriction (CR) is the only intervention that reliably increases mouse longevity. There is considerable phenotypic overlap between long-lived mutant mice and normal mice o...

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Autores principales: Bonkowski, Michael S., Dominici, Fernando P., Arum, Oge, Rocha, Juliana S., Al Regaiey, Khalid A., Westbrook, Reyhan, Spong, Adam, Panici, Jacob, Masternak, Michal M., Kopchick, John J., Bartke, Andrzej
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2639640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19234595
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004567
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author Bonkowski, Michael S.
Dominici, Fernando P.
Arum, Oge
Rocha, Juliana S.
Al Regaiey, Khalid A.
Westbrook, Reyhan
Spong, Adam
Panici, Jacob
Masternak, Michal M.
Kopchick, John J.
Bartke, Andrzej
author_facet Bonkowski, Michael S.
Dominici, Fernando P.
Arum, Oge
Rocha, Juliana S.
Al Regaiey, Khalid A.
Westbrook, Reyhan
Spong, Adam
Panici, Jacob
Masternak, Michal M.
Kopchick, John J.
Bartke, Andrzej
author_sort Bonkowski, Michael S.
collection PubMed
description Most mutations that delay aging and prolong lifespan in the mouse are related to somatotropic and/or insulin signaling. Calorie restriction (CR) is the only intervention that reliably increases mouse longevity. There is considerable phenotypic overlap between long-lived mutant mice and normal mice on chronic CR. Therefore, we investigated the interactive effects of CR and targeted disruption or knock out of the growth hormone receptor (GHRKO) in mice on longevity and the insulin signaling cascade. Every other day feeding corresponds to a mild (i.e. 15%) CR which increased median lifespan in normal mice but not in GHRKO mice corroborating our previous findings on the effects of moderate (30%) CR on the longevity of these animals. To determine why insulin sensitivity improves in normal but not GHRKO mice in response to 30% CR, we conducted insulin stimulation experiments after one year of CR. In normal mice, CR increased the insulin stimulated activation of the insulin signaling cascade (IR/IRS/PI3K/AKT) in liver and muscle. Livers of GHRKO mice responded to insulin by increased activation of the early steps of insulin signaling, which was dissipated by altered PI3K subunit abundance which putatively inhibited AKT activation. In the muscle of GHRKO mice, there was elevated downstream activation of the insulin signaling cascade (IRS/PI3K/AKT) in the absence of elevated IR activation. Further, we found a major reduction of inhibitory Ser phosphorylation of IRS-1 seen exclusively in GHRKO muscle which may underpin their elevated insulin sensitivity. Chronic CR failed to further modify the alterations in insulin signaling in GHRKO mice as compared to normal mice, likely explaining or contributing to the absence of CR effects on insulin sensitivity and longevity in these long-lived mice.
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spelling pubmed-26396402009-02-23 Disruption of Growth Hormone Receptor Prevents Calorie Restriction from Improving Insulin Action and Longevity Bonkowski, Michael S. Dominici, Fernando P. Arum, Oge Rocha, Juliana S. Al Regaiey, Khalid A. Westbrook, Reyhan Spong, Adam Panici, Jacob Masternak, Michal M. Kopchick, John J. Bartke, Andrzej PLoS One Research Article Most mutations that delay aging and prolong lifespan in the mouse are related to somatotropic and/or insulin signaling. Calorie restriction (CR) is the only intervention that reliably increases mouse longevity. There is considerable phenotypic overlap between long-lived mutant mice and normal mice on chronic CR. Therefore, we investigated the interactive effects of CR and targeted disruption or knock out of the growth hormone receptor (GHRKO) in mice on longevity and the insulin signaling cascade. Every other day feeding corresponds to a mild (i.e. 15%) CR which increased median lifespan in normal mice but not in GHRKO mice corroborating our previous findings on the effects of moderate (30%) CR on the longevity of these animals. To determine why insulin sensitivity improves in normal but not GHRKO mice in response to 30% CR, we conducted insulin stimulation experiments after one year of CR. In normal mice, CR increased the insulin stimulated activation of the insulin signaling cascade (IR/IRS/PI3K/AKT) in liver and muscle. Livers of GHRKO mice responded to insulin by increased activation of the early steps of insulin signaling, which was dissipated by altered PI3K subunit abundance which putatively inhibited AKT activation. In the muscle of GHRKO mice, there was elevated downstream activation of the insulin signaling cascade (IRS/PI3K/AKT) in the absence of elevated IR activation. Further, we found a major reduction of inhibitory Ser phosphorylation of IRS-1 seen exclusively in GHRKO muscle which may underpin their elevated insulin sensitivity. Chronic CR failed to further modify the alterations in insulin signaling in GHRKO mice as compared to normal mice, likely explaining or contributing to the absence of CR effects on insulin sensitivity and longevity in these long-lived mice. Public Library of Science 2009-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2639640/ /pubmed/19234595 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004567 Text en Bonkowski et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bonkowski, Michael S.
Dominici, Fernando P.
Arum, Oge
Rocha, Juliana S.
Al Regaiey, Khalid A.
Westbrook, Reyhan
Spong, Adam
Panici, Jacob
Masternak, Michal M.
Kopchick, John J.
Bartke, Andrzej
Disruption of Growth Hormone Receptor Prevents Calorie Restriction from Improving Insulin Action and Longevity
title Disruption of Growth Hormone Receptor Prevents Calorie Restriction from Improving Insulin Action and Longevity
title_full Disruption of Growth Hormone Receptor Prevents Calorie Restriction from Improving Insulin Action and Longevity
title_fullStr Disruption of Growth Hormone Receptor Prevents Calorie Restriction from Improving Insulin Action and Longevity
title_full_unstemmed Disruption of Growth Hormone Receptor Prevents Calorie Restriction from Improving Insulin Action and Longevity
title_short Disruption of Growth Hormone Receptor Prevents Calorie Restriction from Improving Insulin Action and Longevity
title_sort disruption of growth hormone receptor prevents calorie restriction from improving insulin action and longevity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2639640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19234595
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004567
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