4.7 Article

Oleic Acid Protects Caenorhabditis Mothers From Mating-Induced Death and the Cost of Reproduction

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出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.690373

关键词

Caenorhabditis elegans; longevity; reproduction; oleic acid; mating-induced death; metabolism; cost of reproduction

资金

  1. HHMI-Simons Faculty Scholar Award
  2. NIH [R01 AG034446]
  3. Susan W. and James C. Blair '61 P87 Endowed Senior thesis fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Reproduction comes at a cost, but can be uncoupled from somatic longevity regulation through supplementation of oleic acid (OA), which restores fat storage and extends lifespan, indicating a crucial role of oleic acid in post-reproductive lifespan regulation.
Reproduction comes at a cost, including accelerated death. Previous studies of the interconnections between reproduction, lifespan, and fat metabolism in C. elegans were predominantly performed in low-reproduction conditions. To understand how increased reproduction affects lifespan and fat metabolism, we examined mated worms; we find that a Delta 9 desaturase, FAT-7, is significantly up-regulated. Dietary supplementation of oleic acid (OA), the immediate downstream product of FAT-7 activity, restores fat storage and completely rescues mating-induced death, while other fatty acids cannot. OA-mediated lifespan restoration is also observed in C. elegans mutants suffering increased death from short-term mating, and in mated C. remanei females, indicating a conserved role of oleic acid in post-mating lifespan regulation. Our results suggest that increased reproduction can be uncoupled from the costs of reproduction from somatic longevity regulation if provided with the limiting lipid, oleic acid.

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