迟钝
表观遗传学
医学
生物
内科学
遗传学
基因
温度调节
作者
Lorna Jayne,Aurora Lavin-Peter,Julian Roessler,Alexander Tyshkovskiy,Mateusz Antoszewski,Erika Ren,Aleksandar Markovski,Senmiao Sun,Hanqi Yao,Vijay G. Sankaran,Vadim N. Gladyshev,Robert T. Brooke,Steve Horvath,Eric C. Griffith,Siniša Hrvatin
出处
期刊:Nature Aging
日期:2025-03-07
被引量:3
标识
DOI:10.1038/s43587-025-00830-4
摘要
Torpor and hibernation are extreme physiological adaptations of homeotherms associated with pro-longevity effects. Yet the underlying mechanisms of how torpor affects aging, and whether hypothermic and hypometabolic states can be induced to slow aging and increase healthspan, remain unknown. Here we demonstrate that the activity of a spatially defined neuronal population in the preoptic area, which has previously been identified as a torpor-regulating brain region, is sufficient to induce a torpor-like state (TLS) in mice. Prolonged induction of TLS slows epigenetic aging across multiple tissues and improves healthspan. We isolate the effects of decreased metabolic rate, long-term caloric restriction, and decreased core body temperature (Tb) on blood epigenetic aging and find that the decelerating effect of TLSs on aging is mediated by decreased Tb. Taken together, our findings provide novel mechanistic insight into the decelerating effects of torpor and hibernation on aging and support the growing body of evidence that Tb is an important mediator of the aging processes. Dissecting the effects of hypothermic and hypometabolic states on aging processes, the authors show that activation of neurons in the preoptic area induces a torpor-like state in mice that slows epigenetic aging and improves healthspan. These pro-longevity effects are mediated by reduced Tb, reinforcing evidence that Tb is a key mediator of aging processes.
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