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Live longer with fewer calories
November 2, 2011--By consuming fewer
calories, ageing can be slowed down and
the development of age-related diseases
such as cancer and type 2 diabetes can
be delayed. The earlier calorie intake
is reduced, the greater the effect.
Researchers at the University of
Gothenburg have now identified one of
the enzymes that hold the key to the
ageing process.
"We are able
to show that caloric restriction slows down
ageing by preventing an enzyme,
peroxiredoxin, from being inactivated. This
enzyme is also extremely important in
counteracting damage to our genetic
material," says Mikael Molin of the
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology.
By gradually
reducing the intake of sugar and proteins,
without reducing vitamins and minerals,
researchers have previously shown that
monkeys can live several years longer than
expected.
The method
has also been tested on everything from
fishes and rats to fungi, flies and yeasts
with favourable results. Caloric restriction
also has favourable effects on our health
and delays the development of age-related
diseases. Despite this, researchers in the
field have found it difficult to explain
exactly how caloric restriction produces
these favourable effects.
Using yeast
cells as a model, the research team at the
University of Gothenburg has successfully
identified one of the enzymes required. They
are able to show that active peroxiredoxin
1, Prx1, an enzyme that breaks down harmful
hydrogen peroxide in the cells, is required
for caloric restriction to work effectively.
The results,
which have been published in the scientific
journal Molecular
Cell, show that Prx1 is damaged during
ageing and loses its activity. Caloric
restriction counteracts this by increasing
the production of another enzyme, Srx1,
which repairs Prx1. Interestingly, the study
also shows that ageing can be delayed
without caloric restriction by only
increasing the quantity of Srx1 in the cell.
Repair of the peroxiredoxin Prx1
consequently emerges as a key process in
ageing.
"Impaired
Prx1 function leads to various types of
genetic defects and cancer. Conversely, we
can now speculate whether increased repair
of Prx1 during ageing can counteract, or at
least delay, the development of cancer."
Peroxiredoxins have also been shown to be
capable of preventing proteins from being
damaged and aggregating, a process that has
been linked to several age-related disorders
affecting the nervous system, such as
Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. The researchers
are accordingly also considering whether
stimulation of Prx1 can reduce and delay
such disease processes.