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  • Olfactory perception of food abundance regulates dietary restriction-mediated longevity via a brain-to-gut signal.

Olfactory perception of food abundance regulates dietary restriction-mediated longevity via a brain-to-gut signal.

Nature aging (2021-04-03)
Bi Zhang, Heejin Jun, Jun Wu, Jianfeng Liu, X Z Shawn Xu
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

The role of food nutrients in mediating the positive effect of dietary restriction (DR) on longevity has been extensively characterized, but how non-nutrient food components regulate lifespan is not well understood. Here, we show that food-associated odors shorten the lifespan of C. elegans under DR but not those fed ad libitum, revealing a specific effect of food odors on DR-mediated longevity. Food odors act on a neural circuit comprising the sensory neurons ADF and CEP, and the interneuron RIC. This olfactory circuit signals the gut to suppress DR-mediated longevity via octopamine, the mammalian homolog of norepinephrine, by regulating the energy sensor AMPK through a Gq-PLCβ-CaMKK-dependent mechanism. In mouse primary cells, we find that norepinephrine signaling regulates AMPK through a similar mechanism. Our results identify a brain-gut axis that regulates DR-mediated longevity by relaying olfactory information about food abundance from the brain to the gut.

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Fetales Kälberserum, USA origin, sterile-filtered, suitable for cell culture, suitable for hybridoma
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Dexamethason, powder, BioReagent, suitable for cell culture, ≥97%
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3-Isobutyl-1-methylxanthin, BioUltra, ≥99%
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Dispase® II (neutrale Protease, Klasse II), lyophilized, from bacterial, Roche, pkg of 5 × 1 g
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