- Download: PDF | Citation | XML
- Print article
- EzReprint New & improved!
Published in the September 2007 Issue of PLoS Genetics
Open Access
Review
Genetics of Aging in Caenorhabditis elegans
- To add a note, highlight some text. Hide notes
- Make a general comment
Abstract Top
A dissection of longevity in Caenorhabditis elegans reveals that animal life span is influenced by genes, environment, and stochastic factors. From molecules to physiology, a remarkable degree of evolutionary conservation is seen.
Citation: Antebi A (2007) Genetics of Aging in Caenorhabditis elegans. PLoS Genet 3(9): e129. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.0030129
Editor: Stuart K. Kim, Stanford University Medical Center, United States of America
Published: September 28, 2007
Copyright: © 2007 Adam Antebi. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Funding: National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute on Aging (NIA), and Glenn/American Foundation for Aging Research/Breakthroughs in Gerontology Award.
Competing interests: The author has declared that no competing interests exist.
Abbreviations: DR, dietary restriction; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; IIS, insulin/IGF-I signaling; ILP, insulin-like peptide; NHR, nuclear hormone receptor; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TOR, target of rapamycin
Adam Antebi is with the Huffington Center on Aging, Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of America. E-mail: aantebi@bcm.edu
Introduction Top
Over the last 20 years, fundamental insights into the biology of aging have emerged through the study of model genetic organisms, where undoubtedly the tiny nematode C. elegans has led the way. Importantly, the discovery that the single gene mutants age-1 and daf-2 could extend the short three-week life span 1–2-fold revealed that longevity is under genetic control [1,2]. Long life was shown to depend on another locus, daf-16, defining an epistasis pathway for this process. Moreover, the molecular identification of all three as components of insulin/IGF-I signaling (IIS) [3–6] eventually led to the striking realization that a modest downregulation of IIS promotes stress resistance and longevity across taxa [7–10].
Molecular genetic studies suggest that in response to insulin-like peptides (ILPs) [11,12], activation of the DAF-2/insulin/IGF-1 receptor tyrosine kinase triggers a PI3/AKT/SGK kinase cascade that phosphorylates the DAF-16/FOXO transcription factor [13–16] (Figure 1). Consequently, DAF-16/FOXO is retained cytoplasmically and animals live normal life spans. In response to increased DAF-18/PTEN activity [14,17], stress (heat, oxidative, starvation) or reduced IIS, DAF-16/FOXO enters the nucleus [18–20], where it turns on survival genes, including those that manage oxidative stress, heat shock, innate immunity, metabolism, autophagy, and xenobiotic response, among others [21–25]. Indeed, over- or underexpression of such targets often impacts stress resistance and longevity [22,26]. Many of these points and more have been reviewed elsewhere [27,28].
Figure 1. A Model for Insulin/IGF-1 Signal Transduction, Showing Associated Kinase Inputs and Nuclear Factors (See Text)
doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.0030129.g001Importantly, IIS is best understood as a signaling pathway selected in evolution to regulate organismal survival, not aging per se. Indeed, during larval development, DAF-16/FOXO specifies the dauer diapause, a long-lived stress-resistant larval stage specialized for survival, but can independently trigger longevity in adults [29]. Evidently, the primary role of IIS is to invest in somatic endurance to outlast hard times, and conversely specify growth and reproduction in good times, with secondary consequences on adult life span. Consistent with this, many longevity mutants have reduced Darwinian fitness under conditions favoring short-term rapid reproductive output [30].
Since the elucidation of this core pathway, scores of longevity genes have emerged from candidate approaches, unbiased genome-wide RNAi screens, and transcriptional profiles, some working through IIS, others not [22,31–35]. Because they cannot all be enumerated here, we have taken an admittedly “transduction-centric” view to highlight new developments. We start with upstream signaling events of sensory perception, walk through new signaling inputs, focus on transcriptional factors, and then discuss broad physiological processes (respiration, translation, checkpoint control, diet restriction), which may impact longevity through hormesis, the induction of enhanced robustness and survival by exposure to low levels of stress [36].
Sensory Input: The Senseless Liveth Top
Critical for making preemptive decisions that prepare the animal for times ahead, sensory perception can also dramatically influence life span. Mutants deficient in sensory neuron structure and function have extended longevity, which is largely but not entirely daf-16 dependent [37]. Moreover, such mutants cause DAF-16/FOXO to relocate to the nucleus [19]. Components of sensory cell signal transduction, including G-protein coupled receptors, G-proteins, cGMP channel subunits, ciliary proteins, Tubby, and proteins implicated in synaptic transmission [37–42] are thought to regulate release of ILPs from sensory cells, thereby influencing organismal physiology. Cell ablation studies show that both gustatory and olfactory neurons contribute, with specific neurons promoting longevity and others suppressing it [38]. The exact sensory cues governing ILP synthesis and release are likely to include nutrients, and various repellants or attractants, but this area remains largely unexplored. Related findings have recently emerged in Drosophila, in which or83b mutants, broadly deficient in olfaction, live long [43]. Moreover, odorants from yeast paste reduce longevity induced under conditions of dietary restriction. Thus, perception as well as ingestion may impact animal life span in diverse taxa.
In addition to sensory cues, serotonergic inputs may work upstream of IIS. Notably, mutants in the serotonergic receptor ser-1 are longer lived, in a daf-16/FOXO-dependent manner [44]. Surprisingly, mutants in ser-4, another serotonin receptor, are somewhat short lived, suggesting the receptors could act antagonistically, similar to the cells described above. Moreover, mutants deficient in serotonin production, such as tph-1, are stress resistant, but not long lived [44–46]; opposing effects of the receptors might explain this phenomenon. Because serotonergic signaling is phyletically ancient, it may have a conserved physiologic role in life span regulation, and be amenable to pharmacologic intervention.
Signal Transduction: Wiring Longevity Top
Aside from IIS, several other transduction pathways appear to impinge upon DAF-16/FOXO. Whereas the IIS kinase inputs described above inhibit DAF-16/FOXO, several kinases described below stimulate it (Figure 1). JUN kinase, a mediator of the stress response, results in life span extension, increased resistance to oxidative stress, and DAF-16/FOXO nuclear localization upon overexpression [47]. Longevity is daf-16/FOXO dependent, and FOXO is a JNK substrate. Because JNK overexpression further increases daf-2/IIR mutant longevity, it may work in parallel to PI3/AKT. Importantly, this role is evolutionarily conserved. In D. melanogaster, JNK activation specifically within insulin-producing neurons results in nuclear localization of dFOXO, suppression of insulin production, and extension of life span [48,49]. Intriguingly, this suggests that the organismal stress response can be coordinated centrally. MST is a ste20-like kinase implicated in growth control. Like JNK-1, overexpression of the C. elegans homolog slows aging, extends life span in a daf-16-dependent manner, and further extends longevity of daf-2/RNAi treated animals [50]. Moreover, loss of function reduces daf-2 longevity. Although JNK and MST phosphorylate different residues, it is unclear if they identify parallel pathways or the same pathway. The mammalian MST1 also activates FOXO, but instead stimulates apoptosis in primary neurons in response to oxidative stress, i.e., decreasing cellular survival [50]. Conceivably, the mammalian response may be tissue specific. The p38 MAP kinase pathway, implicated in the C. elegans stress response and innate immunity as well as RAS signaling, is required in part for daf-2 longevity [51,52]. Finally, mutants of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a fuel sensor sensitive to AMP/ATP ratios, suppress daf-2 longevity, while overexpression modestly extends life [53]. How these and other kinases interact to control FOXO activity is not well understood, and it will be fascinating to deduce the kinase inputs, decipher the signaling specificity, and elucidate the covalent code modulating FOXO activity.
Aside from phosphorylation, FOXO is also covalently modified by ubiquitination and acetylation (below). Recently, an evolutionarily conserved E3 ubiquitin ligase, called RLE-1, has been shown to ubiquitinate DAF-16/FOXO, leading to its destabilization [54]. Conversely, RLE-1 loss results in increased levels of FOXO protein, sustained nuclear localization, stress resistance, and longevity. As expected, the longevity of rle-1 mutants is daf-16 dependent. RLE-1 may be one of several ubiquitin ligases that controls FOXO stability.
Transcriptional Control: The Master Regulators of Survival Top
As the discussion above reveals, DAF-16/FOXO is a master regulator of survival that integrates multiple inputs. Likewise, several different transcription factors/cofactors work in concert with DAF-16/FOXO to modulate its output (Figure 1). The conserved nuclear factor, SMK-1, is responsible for mediating specific aspects of FOXO biology, namely IIS and germline longevity and pathogen, UV, and oxidative-stress resistance, but not heat resistance and dauer formation [55]. Conceivably, SMK-1 works as a coregulator or cofactor for DAF-16/FOXO, since it modulates its transcriptional output. Moreover, SMK-1 harbors LXXLL motifs typical of transcriptional coactivators, but its exact molecular activity remains to be determined. In response to thermal stress, HSF-1, a heat shock transcription factor, induces various heat shock chaperones, which clear misfolded proteins and protect cells. Loss of activity accelerates proteotoxicity and tissue aging, while overexpression increases heat resistance and extends life span in a daf-16(+)-dependent manner. Moreover, hsf-1 is required for daf-2 longevity [56,57] as well as the innate immune response, broadening the spectrum of its age-related functions [58].
Best known for its developmental role in wnt signal transduction, β-catenin also guards cells against oxidative stress. Mutants in the C. elegans homolog, bar-1, are more susceptible to oxidative stress and are short lived [59]. Interestingly, BAR-1 physically associates with DAF-16/FOXO, as do the mammalian counterparts. Moreover, β-catenin enhances superoxide dismutase expression in both systems. However, whether bar-1 or other components of wnt signaling mediate daf-2 longevity has not been directly tested.
Sirtuins are NAD+-dependent protein deacetylases whose increased dose augments longevity in yeast, worms, and flies [60–62]. In mammals, sirtuins deacetylate a number of targets, including p53, PGC-1alpha, and FOXO, to name a few [63–67], thereby modulating their transcriptional activity. Notably, extra copies of C. elegans sir-2.1 enhance longevity and stress resistance, in a manner dependent on daf-16/FOXO and 14-3-3 scaffold proteins. Evidence suggests SIR-2.1 may work in parallel to IIS [61,68,69]. Indeed, in response to stress (but not reduced IIS), SIR-2.1,14-3-3 protein and DAF-16/FOXO form a nuclear complex that activates FOXO transcriptional targets such as sod-3.
SIR-2.1 may also have FOXO-independent outputs. Sirtuins are stimulated by polyphenolics such as resveratrol [70], one of the salutary compounds found in red wine. Interestingly, resveratrol extends the life span of yeast, worms, flies, and perhaps mice, in a sirtuin-dependent manner [71,72]. In C. elegans, resveratrol induces abu-11 and other components of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response [73]. The ER stress response is stimulated as a result of misfolded or misglycosylated proteins in the secretory pathway. ABU-11 and related molecules are transmembrane proteins similar to scavenger receptors, and are proposed to target secretory components for lysosomal degradation [74]. Consistent with a rate-limiting role, abu-11 RNAi abrogates resveratrol-mediated longevity and overexpression extends life, while, surprisingly, daf-16/FOXO has little effect.
Nuclear hormone receptors (NHR) transcription factors regulate gene expression in response to lipophilic hormones, and are well poised to coordinate organismal physiology. C. elegans DAF-12/NHR, a relative of vertebrate vitamin D and LXR receptors, promotes longevity in several contexts. One is in the germline longevity pathway. When germline stem cells are removed, either by mutation or by laser microsurgery, animals live 50%–60% longer than wild type [75,76]. This is not due simply to sterility, since additional removal of somatic gonadal support cells produces infertile animals with normal life span. Conceivably, germline and somatic gonad produce opposing signals that coordinate organismal maturation, with secondary consequences on aging. Although distinct from IIS, germline longevity depends on functional DAF-16/FOXO as well as DAF-12/NHR [76]. Moreover, FOXO enters intestinal nuclei upon germline removal, indicating a signaling event [19]. Notably, mutants deficient in biosynthesis of DAF-12 ligands, as well as the conserved gene kri-1, also abolish germline longevity, and diminish FOXO nuclear accumulation [77–80]. Endogenous DAF-12 ligands include 3-keto bile acid-like steroids, called dafachronic acids [81], as well as the structurally related 25S-cholestenoic acid [82], which also serves as ligand for the mammalian homolog LXR [83]. As predicted from the genetics, ligand supplementation of hormone biosynthetic mutants restores DAF-16/FOXO nuclear localization and longevity of germlineless animals [80]. Recently, the steroid pregnenolone has been reportedly found in higher concentrations in germline-less animals compared to wild type [84]. Moreover, exogenous pregnenolone enhances longevity in a daf-12(+)-dependent fashion. However, pregnenolone is not a DAF-12/NHR ligand, suggesting an indirect effect. DAF-12 is also required for longevity in the dauer pathways. Biosynthetic mutants devoid of dafachronic acids, such as daf-9/cytochrome P450, manifest adult longevity and stress resistance that is daf-12(+) dependent [79,85,86]. Moreover, hormone supplementation restores normal life span and stress resistance [80]. Altogether, these findings provide crucial evidence for bile acid–like steroids modulating animal life span.
MicroRNAs: Timing Long Life? Top
The heterochronic loci control C. elegans larval developmental timing, specifying stage specific programs and the life plan, but curiously, a handful also impact adult life span. lin-4 encodes an evolutionarily conserved microRNA, which downregulates the nuclear factor LIN-14 via translational inhibition of the 3′ UTR [87,88]. These genes work in tandem in a timing switch that advances early larval stage programs. With respect to adult longevity, lin-4 mutants are short lived, while lin-14 mutants are long lived, suggesting that lin-4(+) retards aging through downregulation of lin-14(+) [89]. Interestingly, longevity is also daf-16/FOXO dependent. Conceivably, long life arises from perturbations of a timer in the adult. Alternatively, lin-4/lin-14 may regulate IIS directly, since the insulin-like gene, ins-33, is a bona fide LIN-14 transcriptional target [90]. Intriguingly, numerous microRNAs undergo distinct changes in expression pattern during adult life, including those predicted to target known regulators of survival [91]. Perhaps they too function in adult aging.
Checkpoint Control Top
A critical facet of cellular function is the response to DNA damage, genotoxic stress, and other insults. Aging in higher animals may be influenced by the balance of cell survival versus death, a decision often governed by checkpoint proteins in dividing cells. However, adult C. elegans animals lack dividing cells except for the germline. Surprisingly, then, deficiencies in checkpoint control—including cid-1 poly(A+) polymerase, chk-1 kinase, cdc-25 phosphatase, as well as clk-2/RAD5—result in longer adult life but reduced broods [92,93]. Moreover, checkpoint-deficient animals are typically thermotolerant and upregulate sod-3/MnSOD (in intestine) and the ER resident hsp-4/BiP (in vulva), showing molecular induction of a stress response. However, chk-1 RNAi longevity is daf-16/FOXO independent, and therefore likely works through another transcriptional regulator. A good candidate is cep-1, whose mammalian counterpart, p53, works downstream of chk1. In mammals, p53 loss increases tumorigenesis, while specific gain-of-function alleles reduce tumor incidence but accelerate aging, suggesting a trade-off between tumor surveillance and stem cell maintenance [94]. Intriguingly then, disabling checkpoint function in C. elegans mitotic germline cells or postmitotic somatic cells triggers states of enhanced organismal survival. Modulating checkpoints so that benefits are not outweighed by detriments remains a future challenge.
Mitochondrial-Induced Longevity Top
Mitochondrial function is central to cellular metabolism and apoptosis, while dysfunction causes numerous age-associated diseases, including diabetes, cardiomyopathy, and neurodegeneration. Surprisingly, then, a major class of C. elegans longevity mutants are deficient in mitochondrial function. The first described include clk-1, which is defective in ubiquinone biosynthesis, and isp-1, which lacks a Rieske FeS protein of complex III [93,95,96]. Genome-wide RNAi screens identified many other mitochondrial components, all of which extend life independent of daf-16 and daf-2 [33,34]. These mutants display increased developmental times, slowed behavior, and smaller broods. As expected, most diminish respiration, although it is controversial whether clk-1 does or not [97,98]. Evidently, levels of mitochondrial gene activity must be optimized, since severe loss of function results in lethality or shortevity [99]. How might disabling mitochondria provoke extended survival? Conceivably, it produces a lower rate of living, and consequently decreased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) [96]. Alternately, perturbation of electron transport may actually increase ROS, provoking a hormetic adaptive response [99]. Or it may stimulate mitochondrial turnover and thrifty metabolism. In any case, longevity likely depends in part on signaling, since molecules such as aak-2/AMPK are required [100]. Can this example illuminate aging in higher organisms? Perhaps yes, since heterozygous knockouts of the mouse clk-1 are longer lived, suggesting that partial loss of function can confer benefits [101].
Dietary Restriction–Induced Longevity Top
Dietary restriction (DR), the reduction of dietary intake without malnutrition, extends life span from yeast to rodents, and likely involves evolutionarily conserved mechanisms. In C. elegans, DR is induced by various regimens, including limiting the amount of bacterial food in liquid culture [102], liquid growth in a defined synthetic medium [103], or limiting dietary intake with feeding mutants such as eat-2 [104]. Even shifting adults onto agar plates without bacterial food, but with residual nutrients from peptone and agar, robustly extends life [105,106]. Whether these regimens all pinpoint the same process is still unclear, and each one has its own merits and caveats.
Recently, some exciting progress has been made in identifying genes mediating DR. Namely, PHA-4/FOXA1 and SKN-1/NRF transcription factors have been shown to be required for DR induced longevity [107,108]. When these genes are inactivated in the adult, animals are no longer long lived under reduced dietary intake. The effect is specific, since these mutants have little effect on daf-2/IIR longevity; moreover, daf-16/FOXO mutants are still susceptible to DR. SKN-1 has an early role in pharynx and gut specification, and a later role in the response to oxidative stress in the gut [109,110]. Interestingly, however, SKN-1 activity specifically in two neurosensory cells, called the ASIs, mediates DR-induced longevity [108], implying sensory inputs into DR. Nonetheless, mutants deficient in sensory transduction still respond to DR. By inference, neuronal SKN-1 must regulate the organismal response to DR through a hormonal mechanism. Accordingly, DR globally stimulates respiration, presumably to maximize organismal energy efficiency. Similarly, PHA-4/FOXA1 has an early role in endo/mesoderm specification in worms and mammals, but also regulates mammalian glucose homeostasis later in life [111,112]. C. elegans PHA-4 is expressed in the adult gut, gonad, and nervous system, yet influences life span of the entire organism, also implying endocrine control. Consistent with this, the mammalian FOXA regulates pancreatic glucagon production [112]. Dissecting their respective signaling pathways promises to further open up DR to a molecular analysis.
Sirtuins and related molecules have been implicated as potential mediators of DR in yeast and flies, although this remains controversial [62,113,114]. Conflicting reports also leave this issue unresolved in worms [115,116]. Discrepancies might arise because of unknown differences in culture conditions. Evidence also suggests that TOR (target of rapamycin) kinase mediates DR in flies and yeast [117,118]. TOR kinase promotes growth and protein synthesis, while its reduction dampens translation and increases recycling of cellular components through autophagy. In worms, a reduction of TOR, the downstream S6 kinase, ribosomal initiation factors, as well as ribosomal protein subunits themselves, reduce translation and extend adult life span [115,119–123]. Consistent with a role in DR, TOR longevity is not further extended in eat-2 mutants. Surprisingly, however, downstream components do extend life span beyond eat-2, suggesting that TOR outputs independent of translation could be critical for DR. Interestingly, deletion of ribosomal subunits in S. cerevisiae also extends replicative life span [118]. It will be critical to understand whether longevity arises from benefits due to globally reduced translation itself or from the regulation of specific factors.
Aging and Age-Related Disease Top
With all these longevity genes, a critical question is how do worms age, and from what do they die? With age, there is a progressive decline in body movement and pharyngeal pumping [124]. Most striking, muscle integrity deteriorates dramatically [125], with derangement of muscle fibers and overt changes in nuclear morphology—phenotypes reminiscent of sarcopenia, a major contributor of age-related decline in people. Surprisingly, the worm nervous system appears resilient, with little obvious change in structure or reporter expression, although function has not been critically tested. Among other things, aging worms show an increase in the appearance of necrotic cells, crosslinked cuticle, lipid droplets [126], endomitotic DNA synthesis in the germline [127], AMP/ATP ratios [53], oxidized protein [128], and lipofuscin [129]. Worms are described to die of enteric bacterial infection, and antibiotics extend life [126]. Conceivably, infection may be secondary to a decline in enteric muscle function, which is necessary to expel bacteria.
Although genotype determines the mean life span of a population, individual longevity has a large stochastic component, with several-fold differences observed even with an isogenic population in a uniform environment. Nonetheless, specific markers serve as good predictors of individual life expectancy. For example, stochastic induction of a hsp-16::gfp reporter predicts survival, while premature appearance of lipofuscin predicts early death [129,130]. Significantly, long-lived genotypes also delay the onset of aging and age-related disease, e.g., daf-2 mutants curtail many of the age-dependent changes described above, and ameliorate models of polyQ repeat protein disease, Aβ-proteotoxicity, and germline tumorigenesis [56,131,132]. Conversely, daf-16 or hsf-1 mutants often accelerate pathology. Conceivably, multiple age-related diseases could be mitigated at once by targeting IIS or other longevity pathways.
Conclusions Top
Animal life span is unexpectedly plastic, reflecting regulatory pathways responsive to environmental signals such as nutrients and stress. The future challenge will be to determine how these different pathways map onto and interact with each other, and decipher their molecular mechanisms. For some, basic questions such as where and when are they required, and whether they work cell autonomously or nonautonomously need to be addressed. Another major challenge will be to clarify how global processes (e.g., DR, mitochondrial longevity, checkpoint control, translation, and others) impact aging. What tradeoffs do they entail? Do they invoke signaling events or do they passively divert resources to somatic maintenance? Finally, what are the fundamental causes of aging and how can they be offset? Is it altered protein metabolism, organellar turnover, immune function, metabolic efficiency, ROS or xenobiotic detoxification, genome stability, or all of the above? Answers to these and other questions will be key to understanding broadly conserved aspects of life span determination.
Acknowledgments Top
I thank Dan Magner for comments on the manuscript. My apologies to colleagues whose work I could not cover.
References Top
- (1988) A mutation in the age-1 gene in C. elegans lengthens life and reduces hermaphrodite fertility. Genetics 118: 75–86. Find this article online
- (1993) A C. elegans mutant that lives twice as long as wild type. Nature 366: 461–464. Find this article online
- (1996) A phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase family member regulating longevity and diapause in C. elegans. Nature 382: 536–539. Find this article online
- (1997) daf-2, an insulin receptor-like gene that regulates longevity and diapause in C. elegans. Science 277: 942–946. Find this article online
- (1997) The Fork head transcription factor DAF-16 transduces insulin-like metabolic and longevity signals in C. elegans. Nature 389: 994–999. Find this article online
- (1997) daf-16: an HNF-3/forkhead family member that can function to double the life-span of C. elegans. Science 278: 1319–1322. Find this article online
- (2001) Extension of life-span by loss of CHICO, a Drosophila insulin receptor substrate protein. Science 292: 104–106. Find this article online
- (2001) A mutant Drosophila insulin receptor homolog that extends life-span and impairs neuroendocrine function. Science 292: 107–110. Find this article online
- (2003) Extended longevity in mice lacking the insulin receptor in adipose tissue. Science 299: 572–574. Find this article online
- (2003) IGF-1 receptor regulates lifespan and resistance to oxidative stress in mice. Nature 421: 182–187. Find this article online
- (2001) Regulation of DAF-2 receptor signaling by human insulin and ins-1, a member of the unusually large and diverse C. elegans insulin gene family. Genes Dev 15: 672–686. Find this article online
- (2003) daf-28 encodes a C. elegans insulin superfamily member that is regulated by environmental cues and acts in the DAF-2 signaling pathway. Genes Dev 17: 844–858. Find this article online
- (1998) C. elegans Akt/PKB transduces insulin receptor-like signals from AGE-1 PI3 kinase to the DAF-16 transcription factor. Genes Dev 12: 2488–2498. Find this article online
- (1998) The C. elegans PTEN homolog, DAF-18, acts in the insulin receptor-like metabolic signaling pathway. Mol Cell 2: 887–893. Find this article online
- (1999) A PDK1 homolog is necessary and sufficient to transduce AGE-1 PI3 kinase signals that regulate diapause in C. elegans. Genes Dev 13: 1438–1452. Find this article online
- (2004) C. elegans SGK-1 is the critical component in the Akt/PKB kinase complex to control stress response and life span. Dev Cell 6: 577–588. Find this article online
- (1999) The PTEN tumor suppressor homolog in C. elegans regulates longevity and dauer formation in an insulin receptor-like signaling pathway. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96: 7427–7432. Find this article online
- (2001) Regulation of C. elegans DAF-16 and its human ortholog FKHRL1 by the daf-2 insulin-like signaling pathway. Curr Biol 11: 1950–1957. Find this article online
- (2001) Regulation of the C. elegans longevity protein DAF-16 by insulin/IGF-1 and germline signaling. Nat Genet 28: 139–145. Find this article online
- (2001) daf-16 integrates developmental and environmental inputs to mediate aging in the nematode C. elegans. Curr Biol 11: 1975–1980. Find this article online
- (1999) The daf-2 gene network for longevity regulates oxidative stress resistance and Mn-superoxide dismutase gene expression in C. elegans. Faseb J 13: 1385–1393. Find this article online
- (2003) Genes that act downstream of DAF-16 to influence the lifespan of Caenorhabditis elegans. Nature 424: 277–283. Find this article online
- (2003) DAF-16 target genes that control C. elegans life-span and metabolism. Science 300: 644–647. Find this article online
- (2003) Autophagy genes are essential for dauer development and life-span extension in C. elegans. Science 301: 1387–1391. Find this article online
- (2004) Shared transcriptional signature in Caenorhabditis elegans Dauer larvae and long-lived daf-2 mutants implicates detoxification system in longevity assurance. J Biol Chem 279: 44533–44543. Find this article online
- (2003) Lifespan extension in C. elegans by a molecular chaperone dependent upon insulin-like signals. Aging Cell 2: 131–139. Find this article online
- (2005) The plasticity of aging: insights from long-lived mutants. Cell 120: 449–460. Find this article online
- (2003) The endocrine regulation of aging by insulin-like signals. Science 299: 1346–1351. Find this article online
- (2002) Timing requirements for insulin/IGF-1 signaling in C. elegans. Science 298: 830–834. Find this article online
- (2004) Fitness cost of extended lifespan in Caenorhabditis elegans. Proc Biol Sci 271: 2523–2526. Find this article online
- (2005) A systematic RNAi screen for longevity genes in C. elegans. Genes Dev 19: 1544–1555. Find this article online
- (2005) New genes tied to endocrine, metabolic, and dietary regulation of lifespan from a Caenorhabditis elegans genomic RNAi screen. PLoS Genet 1: 119–128. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.0010017.
- (2002) Rates of behavior and aging specified by mitochondrial function during development. Science 298: 2398–2401. Find this article online
- (2003) A systematic RNAi screen identifies a critical role for mitochondria in C. elegans longevity. Nat Genet 33: 40–48. Find this article online
- (2006) Identification of direct DAF-16 targets controlling longevity, metabolism and diapause by chromatin immunoprecipitation. Nat Genet 38: 251–257. Find this article online
- (2006) Hormesis and aging in Caenorhabditis elegans. Exp Gerontol 41: 935–939. Find this article online
- (1999) Regulation of lifespan by sensory perception in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nature 402: 804–809. Find this article online
- (2004) Regulation of C. elegans longevity by specific gustatory and olfactory neurons. Neuron 41: 45–55. Find this article online
- (1999) Neurosecretory control of aging in Caenorhabditis elegans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96: 7394–7397. Find this article online
- (2003) Positive selection of C. elegans mutants with increased stress resistance and longevity. Genetics 163: 171–180. Find this article online
- (2005) C. elegans tubby regulates life span and fat storage by two independent mechanisms. Cell Metab 2: 35–42. Find this article online
- (2007) Multiple sensory G proteins in the olfactory, gustatory and nociceptive neurons modulate longevity in Caenorhabditis elegans. Dev Biol 303: 474–482. Find this article online
- (2007) Regulation of Drosophila life span by olfaction and food-derived odors. Science 315: 1133–1137. Find this article online
- (2007) Serotonin receptors antagonistically modulate C. elegans longevity. Aging Cell 6: 483–488. Find this article online
- (2000) Food and metabolic signalling defects in a C. elegans serotonin-synthesis mutant. Nature 403: 560–564. Find this article online
- (2006) Serotonin targets the DAF-16/FOXO signaling pathway to modulate stress responses. Cell Metab 4: 429–440. Find this article online
- (2005) JNK regulates lifespan in Caenorhabditis elegans by modulating nuclear translocation of forkhead transcription factor/DAF-16. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102: 4494–4499. Find this article online
- (2005) JNK extends life span and limits growth by antagonizing cellular and organism-wide responses to insulin signaling. Cell 121: 115–125. Find this article online
- (2003) JNK signaling confers tolerance to oxidative stress and extends lifespan in Drosophila. Dev Cell 5: 811–816. Find this article online
- (2006) A conserved MST-FOXO signaling pathway mediates oxidative-stress responses and extends life span. Cell 125: 987–1001. Find this article online
- (2006) p38 MAPK regulates expression of immune response genes and contributes to longevity in C. elegans. PLoS Genet 2: e183. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.0020183.
- (2005) LET-60 RAS modulates effects of insulin/IGF-1 signaling on development and aging in Caenorhabditis elegans. Aging Cell 4: 235–245. Find this article online
- (2004) The AMP-activated protein kinase AAK-2 links energy levels and insulin-like signals to lifespan in C. elegans. Genes Dev 18: 3004–3009. Find this article online
- (2007) RLE-1, an E3 ubiquitin ligase, regulates C. elegans aging by catalyzing DAF-16 polyubiquitination. Dev Cell 12: 235–246. Find this article online
- (2006) SMK-1, an essential regulator of DAF-16-mediated longevity. Cell 124: 1039–1053. Find this article online
- (2003) Regulation of aging and age-related disease by DAF-16 and heat-shock factor. Science 300: 1142–1145. Find this article online
- (2004) Regulation of longevity in Caenorhabditis elegans by heat shock factor and molecular chaperones. Mol Biol Cell 15: 657–664. Find this article online
- (2006) Heat-shock transcription factor (HSF)-1 pathway required for Caenorhabditis elegans immunity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103: 13092–13097. Find this article online
- (2005) Functional interaction between beta-catenin and FOXO in oxidative stress signaling. Science 308: 1181–1184. Find this article online
- (1999) The SIR2/3/4 complex and SIR2 alone promote longevity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by two different mechanisms. Genes Dev 13: 2570–2580. Find this article online
- (2001) Increased dosage of a sir-2 gene extends lifespan in C. elegans. Nature 410: 227–230. Find this article online
- (2004) Sir2 mediates longevity in the fly through a pathway related to calorie restriction. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101: 15998–16003. Find this article online
- (2001) Negative control of p53 by Sir2alpha promotes cell survival under stress. Cell 107: 137–148. Find this article online
- (2001) hSIR2(SIRT1) functions as an NAD-dependent p53 deacetylase. Cell 107: 149–159. Find this article online
- (2004) Mammalian SIRT1 represses forkhead transcription factors. Cell 116: 551–563. Find this article online
- (2004) Stress-dependent regulation of FOXO transcription factors by the SIRT1 deacetylase. Science 303: 2011–2015. Find this article online
- (2005) SIRT1 functionally interacts with the metabolic regulator and transcriptional coactivator PGC-1{alpha}. J Biol Chem 280: 16456–16460. Find this article online
- (2006) C. elegans SIR-2.1 interacts with 14-3-3 proteins to activate DAF-16 and extend life span. Cell 125: 1165–1177. Find this article online
- (2006) C. elegans 14-3-3 proteins regulate life span and interact with SIR-2.1 and DAF-16/FOXO. Mech Ageing Dev 127: 741–747. Find this article online
- (2003) Small molecule activators of sirtuins extend Saccharomyces cerevisiae lifespan. Nature 425: 191–196. Find this article online
- (2004) Sirtuin activators mimic caloric restriction and delay ageing in metazoans. Nature 430: 686–689. Find this article online
- (2006) Resveratrol improves health and survival of mice on a high-calorie diet. Nature 444: 337–342. Find this article online
- (2005) A role for SIR-2.1 regulation of ER stress response genes in determining C. elegans life span. Dev Cell 9: 605–615. Find this article online
- (2002) A survival pathway for Caenorhabditis elegans with a blocked unfolded protein response. J Cell Biol 158: 639–646. Find this article online
- (2002) Regulation of life-span by germ-line stem cells in Caenorhabditis elegans. Science 295: 502–505. Find this article online
- (1999) Signals from the reproductive system regulate the lifespan of C. elegans. Nature 399: 362–366. Find this article online
- (2006) Germ-cell loss extends C. elegans life span through regulation of DAF-16 by kri-1 and lipophilic-hormone signaling. Cell 124: 1055–1068. Find this article online
- (2006) Hormonal control of C. elegans dauer formation and life span by a Rieske-like oxygenase. Developmental Cell 10: 473–482. Find this article online
- (2001) A hormonal signaling pathway influencing C. elegans metabolism, reproductive development, and life span. Dev Cell 1: 841–851. Find this article online
- (2007) A bile acid-like steroid modulates C. elegans lifespan through nuclear receptor signaling. PNAS 104: 5014–5019. Find this article online
- (2006) Identification of DAF-12 ligands that govern dauer formation and reproduction in C. elegans. Cell 124: 1209–1223. Find this article online
- (2006) DAF-12-dependent rescue of dauer formation in Caenorhabditis elegans by (25S)-cholestenoic acid. Aging Cell 5: 283–291. Find this article online
- (2000) Cholestenoic acid is a naturally occurring ligand for liver X receptor alpha. Endocrinology 141: 4180–4184. Find this article online
- (2007) A steroid hormone that extends the lifespan of Caenorhabditis elegans. Aging Cell 6: 87–94. Find this article online
- (2002) DAF-9, a cytochrome P450 regulating C. elegans larval development and adult longevity. Development 129: 221–231. Find this article online
- (2004) A novel nuclear receptor/coregulator complex controls C. elegans lipid metabolism, larval development, and aging. Genes Dev 18: 2120–2133. Find this article online
- (1993) The C. elegans heterochronic gene lin-4 encodes small RNAs with antisense complementarity to lin-14. Cell 75: 843–854. Find this article online
- (1993) Posttranscriptional regulation of the heterochronic gene lin-14 by lin-4 mediates temporal pattern formation in C. elegans. Cell 75: 855–862. Find this article online
- (2005) A developmental timing microRNA and its target regulate life span in C. elegans. Science 310: 1954–1957. Find this article online
- (2005) The Caenorhabditis elegans heterochronic regulator LIN-14 is a novel transcription factor that controls the developmental timing of transcription from the insulin/insulin-like growth factor gene ins-33 by direct DNA binding. Mol Cell Biol 25: 11059–11072. Find this article online
- (2006) Modulated microRNA expression during adult lifespan in Caenorhabditis elegans. Aging Cell 5: 235–246. Find this article online
- (2006) Checkpoint proteins control survival of the postmitotic cells in Caenorhabditis elegans. Science 312: 1381–1385. Find this article online
- (1996) Determination of life-span in Caenorhabditis elegans by four clock genes. Science 272: 1010–1013. Find this article online
- (2003) Cancer and ageing: rival demons? Nat Rev Cancer 3: 339–349. Find this article online
- (1998) Yeast Clk-1 homologue (Coq7/Cat5) is a mitochondrial protein in coenzyme Q synthesis. J Biol Chem 273: 3351–3357. Find this article online
- (2001) Mitochondrial electron transport is a key determinant of life span in Caenorhabditis elegans. Dev Cell 1: 633–644. Find this article online
- (2002) No reduction of energy metabolism in Clk mutants. Mech Ageing Dev 123: 1447–1456. Find this article online
- (2004) Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation is defective in the long-lived mutant clk-1. J Biol Chem 279: 54479–54486. Find this article online
- (2006) Long-lived C. elegans mitochondrial mutants as a model for human mitochondrial-associated diseases. Exp Gerontol 41: 974–991. Find this article online
- (2006) Aging networks in Caenorhabditis elegans: AMP-activated protein kinase (aak-2) links multiple aging and metabolism pathways. Aging Cell 5: 119–126. Find this article online
- (2005) Evolutionary conservation of the clk-1-dependent mechanism of longevity: loss of mclk1 increases cellular fitness and lifespan in mice. Genes Dev 19: 2424–2434. Find this article online
- (1977) Aging in the nematode C. elegans: major biological and environmental factors influencing life span. Mech Ageing Dev 6: 413–429. Find this article online
- (2003) Life extension via dietary restriction is independent of the Ins/IGF-1 signalling pathway in Caenorhabditis elegans. Exp Gerontol 38: 947–954. Find this article online
- (1998) The genetics of caloric restriction in Caenorhabditis elegans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 95: 13091–13096. Find this article online
- (2006) Dietary deprivation extends lifespan in Caenorhabditis elegans. Aging Cell 5: 515–524. Find this article online
- (2006) Lifespan extension in Caenorhabditis elegans by complete removal of food. Aging Cell 5: 487–494. Find this article online
- (2007) PHA-4/Foxa mediates diet-restriction-induced longevity of C. elegans. Nature 447: 550–555. Find this article online
- (2007) Two neurons mediate diet-restriction-induced longevity in C. elegans. Nature 447: 545–549. Find this article online
- (1992) skn-1, a maternally expressed gene required to specify the fate of ventral blastomeres in the early C. elegans embryo. Cell 68: 1061–1075. Find this article online
- (2003) SKN-1 links C. elegans mesendodermal specification to a conserved oxidative stress response. Genes Dev 17: 1882–1893. Find this article online
- (1994) The pha-4 gene is required to generate the pharyngeal primordium of Caenorhabditis elegans. Development 120: 3019–3031. Find this article online
- (2006) The Foxa family of transcription factors in development and metabolism. Cell Mol Life Sci 63: 2317–2328. Find this article online
- (2000) Requirement of NAD and SIR2 for life-span extension by calorie restriction in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Science 289: 2126–2128. Find this article online
- (2004) Sir2-independent life span extension by calorie restriction in yeast. PLoS Biol 2: e296. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0020296.
- (2007) Lifespan extension by conditions that inhibit translation in Caenorhabditis elegans. Aging Cell 6: 95–110. Find this article online
- (2006) Overlapping and distinct functions for a Caenorhabditis elegans SIR2 and DAF-16/FOXO. Mech Ageing Dev 127: 48–56. Find this article online
- (2004) Regulation of lifespan in Drosophila by modulation of genes in the TOR signaling pathway. Curr Biol 14: 885–890. Find this article online
- (2005) Regulation of yeast replicative life span by TOR and Sch9 in response to nutrients. Science 310: 1193–1196. Find this article online
- (2003) Genetics: influence of TOR kinase on lifespan in C. elegans. Nature 426: 620. Find this article online
- (2004) The TOR pathway interacts with the insulin signaling pathway to regulate C. elegans larval development, metabolism and life span. Development 131: 3897–3906. Find this article online
- (2007) Inhibition of mRNA translation extends lifespan in Caenorhabditis elegans. Aging Cell 6: 111–119. Find this article online
- (2006) daf-16 protects the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans during food deprivation. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 61: 444–460. Find this article online
- (2007) eIF4E function in somatic cells modulates ageing in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nature 445: 922–926. Find this article online
- (2004) Measurements of age-related changes of physiological processes that predict lifespan of Caenorhabditis elegans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101: 8084–8089. Find this article online
- (2002) Stochastic and genetic factors influence tissue-specific decline in ageing C. elegans. Nature 419: 808–814. Find this article online
- (2002) Genetic analysis of tissue aging in Caenorhabditis elegans: a role for heat-shock factor and bacterial proliferation. Genetics 161: 1101–1112. Find this article online
- (2007) Dramatic age-related changes in nuclear and genome copy number in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Aging Cell 6: 179–188. Find this article online
- (2002) Protein oxidation during aging of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Free Radic Biol Med 33: 1021–1025. Find this article online
- (2005) In vivo spectrofluorimetry reveals endogenous biomarkers that report healthspan and dietary restriction in Caenorhabditis elegans. Aging Cell 4: 127–137. Find this article online
- (2005) A stress-sensitive reporter predicts longevity in isogenic populations of Caenorhabditis elegans. Nat Genet 37: 894–898. Find this article online
- (2006) Opposing activities protect against age-onset proteotoxicity. Science 313: 1604–1610. Find this article online
- (2006) Mutations that increase the life span of C. elegans inhibit tumor growth. Science 313: 971–975. Find this article online

Add a note to this text.
Post Your Note (For Public Viewing)