Caloric Restriction Extends Life in Monkeys, Study Finds

Another study suggests an immune-suppressing drug helps elderly mice live longer

Posted: July 9, 2009

By Tina Hesman Saey, Science News

People who believed calorie restriction wouldn’t extend life in primates might now have to declare themselves a monkey’s uncle.

A 20-year study found that Rhesus monkeys fed a nutritious, low-calorie diet have fewer age-related diseases than counterparts on a normal diet, researchers report July 10 in Science. Also, MRIs reveal less shrinking with age in areas important for decision-making and controlling movement in the brains of calorie-restricted animals, report Ricki Colman and Richard Weindruch, both of the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and colleagues.

These results show that calorie restriction helps preserve primates’ bodies and brains, says Luigi Fontana, of Washington University in St. Louis and the Italian National Health Service in Rome. Calorie restriction has already been shown to extend the lifespan of mice and dogs, as well as yeast, fruit flies and worms.

The findings may have ramifications for fighting aging and disease in humans, Fontana says. “I’m confident that everything that happens in [non-human] primates will happen in humans.” Since both groups of monkeys are on a very healthy diet, people who go from a high-fat Western diet to a healthy, restricted diet may experience even greater health benefits than seen in this study.

The study began in 1989 with 30 adult male monkeys. In 1994, 30 female and 16 more male monkeys were added to boost statistical power. The monkeys were 7 to 14 years old when they entered the study. Since Rhesus monkeys live, on average, 27 years in captivity, it has taken this long to determine whether cutting calories by 30 percent would fend off aging and death.

Over the course of the study, monkeys on the full-calorie diet were three times more likely to die from an aging-related disease than monkeys that ate 30 percent fewer calories, the researchers found.

Since the study began, 21 of 38 control monkeys and 14 of 38 calorie-restricted monkeys have died. Of the control monkeys, 14 died of age-related causes, such as cancer, heart disease or diabetes. In the calorie-restricted group, only five died from aging-associated diseases, and none have developed symptoms of diabetes. The remaining deaths — seven control and nine calorie-restricted monkeys — were from complications of anesthesia, gastric bloat, endometriosis or injury.

“We were frankly blown away by these findings,” Weindruch says.

Maximal lifespan for Rhesus monkeys is about 40 years old, so researchers won’t know for another decade or two if — or for how long — calorie restriction can prolong life in primates.

Another study, published online July 8 in Nature, may provide hope for people who want to live longer but don’t want to tightly control calories. Researchers in the National Institute on Aging’s Interventions Testing Program prolonged the lifespan of elderly mice by feeding the mice high doses of rapamycin, a drug commonly used to suppress the immune system of organ transplant recipients. The drug is the first molecular mimic of caloric restriction proven to extend lifespan in mammals. A highly touted compound called resveratrol is still in testing, but in other studies has failed to prolong lifespan of mice on a normal diet.

Rapamycin targets an energy-sensing protein called TOR, perhaps tricking cells into thinking their calorie intake has been cut.

Team members at the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine, the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio each fed rapamycin to mice starting when the animals were 600 days old, about 60 years old in human terms.

Female mice fed rapamycin lived about 14 percent longer than female mice that didn’t get the drug. Male mice on rapamycin lived, on average, 9 percent longer than male mice in the control group. The increase might seem minimal, says David Harrison, a physiological geneticist at the Jackson Lab and a lead author of the new mouse study, but the researchers were surprised to see any effect at all in the older animals. Calorie restriction has generally not been effective for prolonging lifespan in mice when started after 18 months of age. Eliminating all deaths from cancer and cardiovascular disease would increase human lifespan less than 9 percent, he says.

But living longer doesn’t mean much if the intervention doesn’t also improve health, says Matt Kaeberlein, a molecular biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.

“Most people don’t want to live an extra 10 years of frailty in old age, what we want is another 10 years of youth and vitality,” he says.

The researchers did not directly examine the health effects of rapamycin in the study, but the results suggest that rapamycin does extend the health-span as well as the lifespan of mice, Kaeberlein says. The researchers tested only one dose of the drug. Other doses may have even more beneficial effects on lifespan. Before such a drug could be used in humans, scientists need to separate the immune-suppressing properties of the drug from its life-extending potential, he says.

Weight? Metabolism?

I've never been able to find a bottom line explanation of the results of such long-term low-cal diets. Does animal just keep getting thinner and thinner until ??? Or does their metabolism reduce so that they have little energy? Or do they reach a weight consistent with the number of calories provided --- then the true key being that non-overweight extends lifespan (which we already know), not caloric restriction in and of itself.

Linda Palmer of CA @ Jul 17, 2009 19:13:06 PM

What they are not telling you...

For fear of ridicule and criticism outside the scientific community, researchers in this topic didn't publish their full report.

They also found that the longer-living calorically-restricted monkeys didn't drink, smoke, cuss, lie, cheat, or charge interest on money they loaned -- and they attended church on a weekly basis. As a group, they preferred to watch PBS specials while their fat-bottomed cage-potato brethen wanted CNN on all the time, until they fell asleep in front of the tube with empty bags of chips on their chests and empty beer bottles littering the floors of their cages. 95% of the longer-living monkeys also had a library card, registered to vote, and volunteered at least four hours per week to help their local communities.

Countering the benefit of increased longevity, researchers noted that the shorter-living all-you-can-eat monkeys took endless and raucous delight in flinging their substantially greater volume of watery crap at them -- particularly when the researchers had their heads down taking notes on a clipboard.

A follow-up study is planned, to better quantify the carbon footprint of the piggie-poo monkey population -- pending a $60 million government earmark in the second stimulus package currently debated.

dom youngross @ Jul 09, 2009 23:02:10 PM

Autophagy: The Active Process Behind mTOR Inhibition and Calorie Restriction

Autophagy (a kind of cell suicide) activated in both mTOR inhibition with Rapamycin and calorie restriction conditions, where some of our body cells (adipose tissue/fat) open up and used for generating energy for body. In other way, if we stop this process by excess feeding, a kind of stress (ER stress) generated. This sustained stress leads to pancreas beta-cell failure and metabolic syndrome (diabetes, high blood pleassure, cardiovascular disease). High fat deposits also leads coronary heart disease.

http://samsleshana.blogspot.com/

Samsleshana of CA @ Jul 09, 2009 22:55:42 PM

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