4.3 Article

Does caloric restriction induce hormesis?

期刊

HUMAN & EXPERIMENTAL TOXICOLOGY
卷 19, 期 6, 页码 320-329

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1191/096032700678815981

关键词

caloric restriction; diet restriction; body weight; hormesis

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The question of whether caloric restriction (CR) is hermetic is addressed in terms of two common definitions of the term. In terms of the older definition, i.e., a growth-stimulatory effect when lower doses of a compound which resulted in growth inhibition at higher doses, CR is better characterized as a co-hormetic (i.e., a paradigm which at relatively low doses, in combination with some stimulus, will evince increased growth (proliferation) and at higher doses will inhibit this increased proliferation) rather than a hermetic agent. Mechanisms such as cellular selection of cellular subpopulations, increases in receptor efficiency, and preservation of cellular proliferative potential can interact with agents and produce increased growth as long as the CR is not too severe. In terms of a broader definition, i.e., nonmonotonic dose-response behavior of a compound for any adverse response, CR appears to be hermetic, both as a result of body weight (BW) loss and other potential mechanisms. The impact of changes in BW, or frank CR, can be considered a component of every test for hormesis, and is thus capable for interaction with any other agent. The changes that BW loss (or CR) induce are so profound that any aspect of an agent's action - metabolism, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics - can modulate the response of an organism to an agent. Similarly, other effects of a chemical that induce BW loss, e.g., physical activity or temperature dysregulation, can also induce dose-response curves that appear hermetic. The interaction of the hermetic agents of BW loss and CR can influence agent tests. Controlling these factors may make it possible to dissect the key components of a hermetic response. In addition, the effects of CR or BW loss appear to extrapolate well across species [Colman R, Kemnitz JW. Aging experiments using nonhuman primates. In: Yu BP (Ed), Methods in Aging Research. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 1999, pp. 249-267]. Thus there is some reason to believe that these hermetic factors may be important for humans, and may already be a factor for tests of adverse agents already conducted in humans.

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