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Sensory perception of environmental cues as a modulator of aging and neurodegeneration: Insights from Caenorhabditis elegans

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 99, Issue 10, Pages 2416-2426

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jnr.24910

Keywords

aging; Caenorhabditis elegans; environmental cues; neurodegeneration

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Environmental stimuli significantly influence animals' physiology and behavior. Inability to respond correctly to varied environmental conditions may result in compromised bodily functions and reduced longevity. Research suggests that aging and neurodegenerative diseases are regulated by sensory perception of environment, including gene-environment interactions affecting life span.
Environmental stimuli such as temperature, food, and smell significantly influence the physiology and behavior of animals. Animals are differentially adapted to maintain their internal body functions in response to varied environmental conditions. These external cues are sensed by specialized neurons which are a part of the chemosensory and thermosensory systems. The inability to respond correctly to varied environmental conditions may result in compromised bodily functions and reduced longevity. For example, the ability to sense food is derived from the integrated action of olfactory and gustatory systems. The damage to the olfactory system will affect our decision of palatable food items which in turn can affect the response of the gustatory system, ultimately causing abnormal feeding habits. Recent studies have provided evidence that aging is regulated by sensory perception of environment. Aging is one of the most common causes of various neurodegenerative diseases and the perception of environmental cues is also found to regulate the development of neurodegenerative phenotype in several animal models. However, specific molecular signaling pathways involved in the process are not completely understood. The research conducted on one of the best-studied animal models of aging, Caenorhabditis elegans, has demonstrated multiple examples of gene-environment interaction at the neuronal level which affects life span. The findings may be useful to identify the key neuronal regulators of aging and age-related diseases in humans owing to conserved core metabolic and aging pathways from worms to humans.

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