4.5 Article

Naked mole-rat and Damaraland mole-rat exhibit lower respiration in mitochondria, cellular and organismal levels

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2022.148582

关键词

Basal metabolic rate; Respiration; Glycolysis; Mitochondria; Hypoxia; Longevity

资金

  1. US National Science Foundation [IOS - 2037735]

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Naked mole-rats and Damaraland mole-rats, with their small body size, exhibit extraordinary longevity, high tolerance to hypoxia and oxidative stress, and high reproductive output. Their unique bioenergetic properties, including low basal metabolic rates, a high dependence on glycolysis for ATP production, and low proton conductance across the mitochondrial inner membrane, may be an evolutionary adaptation to variable oxygen environments and a molecular mechanism underlying their extremely long lifespans.
Naked mole-rats (NMR) and Damaraland mole-rats (DMR) exhibit extraordinary longevity for their body size, high tolerance to hypoxia and oxidative stress and high reproductive output; these collectively defy the concept that life-history traits should be negatively correlated. However, when life-history traits share similar underlying physiological mechanisms, these may be positively associated with each other. We propose that one such potential common mechanism might be the bioenergetic properties of mole-rats. Here, we aim to characterize the bioenergetic properties of two African mole-rats. We adopted a top-down perspective measuring the bioenergetic properties at the organismal, cellular, and molecular level in both species and the biological significance of these properties were compared with the same measures in Siberian hamsters and C57BL/6 mice, chosen for their similar body size to the mole-rat species. We found mole-rats shared several bioenergetic properties that differed from their comparison species, including low basal metabolic rates, a high dependence on glycolysis rather than on oxidative phosphorylation for ATP production, and low proton conductance across the mitochondrial inner membrane. These shared mole-rat features could be a result of evolutionary adaptation to tolerating variable oxygen atmospheres, in particular hypoxia, and may in turn be one of the molecular mechanisms underlying their extremely long lifespans.

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