Data from: Experimentally reduced insulin/IGF-1 signalling in adulthood extends lifespan of parents and improves Darwinian fitness of their offspring
Creators
- 1. Uppsala University
Description
Classical theory maintains that ageing evolves via energy trade-offs between reproduction and survival leading to accumulation of unrepaired cellular damage with age. In contrast, the emerging new theory postulates that ageing evolves because of deleterious late-life hyper-function of reproduction-promoting genes leading to excessive biosynthesis in late-life. The hyper-function theory uniquely predicts that optimizing nutrient-sensing molecular signalling in adulthood can simultaneously postpone ageing and increase Darwinian fitness. Here we show that reducing evolutionarily conserved insulin/IGF-1 nutrient-sensing signalling via daf-2 RNA interference (RNAi) fulfils this prediction in Caenorhabditis elegans nematodes. Long-lived daf-2 RNAi parents showed normal fecundity as self-fertilizing hermaphrodites and improved late-life reproduction when mated to males. Remarkably, the offspring of daf-2 RNAi parents had higher Darwinian fitness across three different genotypes. Thus, reduced nutrient-sensing signalling in adulthood improves both parental longevity and offspring fitness supporting the emerging view that sub-optimal gene expression in late-life lies at the heart of ageing.
Notes
Files
Files
(290.1 kB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:7cc6cc5a68e7da480d309734f43fae12
|
17.6 kB | Download |
md5:56992742e0529b72337bcc7a4671093a
|
15.1 kB | Download |
md5:0e79118e095fe8014b68da0b18d1b9b5
|
13.2 kB | Download |
md5:315d180870315c7379c0d843a5ea22ae
|
51.8 kB | Download |
md5:ef61d2080b99dfba381c8ee11b2de93d
|
43.9 kB | Download |
md5:d51f01e5811f69d2058daa178826e95e
|
61.0 kB | Download |
md5:ffe6862c5c92dfac52bc240a1071c0a7
|
31.1 kB | Download |
md5:8db1141ea073e7499e56fb71273fb93d
|
56.4 kB | Download |
Additional details
Related works
- Is cited by
- 10.1002/evl3.108 (DOI)