A mutant Drosophila insulin receptor homolog that extends life-span and impairs neuroendocrine function
- PMID: 11292875
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1057987
A mutant Drosophila insulin receptor homolog that extends life-span and impairs neuroendocrine function
Abstract
The Drosophila melanogaster gene insulin-like receptor (InR) is homologous to mammalian insulin receptors as well as to Caenorhabditis elegans daf-2, a signal transducer regulating worm dauer formation and adult longevity. We describe a heteroallelic, hypomorphic genotype of mutant InR, which yields dwarf females with up to an 85% extension of adult longevity and dwarf males with reduced late age-specific mortality. Treatment of the long-lived InR dwarfs with a juvenile hormone analog restores life expectancy toward that of wild-type controls. We conclude that juvenile hormone deficiency, which results from InR signal pathway mutation, is sufficient to extend life-span, and that in flies, insulin-like ligands nonautonomously mediate aging through retardation of growth or activation of specific endocrine tissue.
Comment in
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Longevity. Growing old together.Science. 2001 Apr 6;292(5514):41-3. doi: 10.1126/science.292.5514.41. Science. 2001. PMID: 11294208 No abstract available.
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