Spermidine-induced hypusination preserves mitochondrial and cognitive function during aging.
Sebastian J HoferYongTian LiangAndreas ZimmermannSabrina SchroederJörn DengjelGuido KroemerTobias EisenbergStephan J SigristFrank MadeoPublished in: Autophagy (2021)
Spermidine is a natural polyamine, central to cellular homeostasis and growth, that promotes macroautophagy/autophagy. The polyamine pathway is highly conserved from bacteria to mammals and spermidine (prominently found in some kinds of aged cheese, wheat germs, nuts, soybeans, and fermented products thereof, among others) is an intrinsic part of the human diet. Apart from nutrition, spermidine is available to mammalian organisms from intracellular biosynthesis and microbial production in the gut. Importantly, externally supplied spermidine (via drinking water or food) prolongs lifespan, activates autophagy, improves mitochondrial function, and refills polyamine pools that decline during aging in various tissues of model organisms, including mice. In two adjacent studies, we explored how dietary spermidine supplementation enhances eEF5/EIF5A hypusination, cerebral mitochondrial function and cognition in aging Drosophila melanogaster and mice.
Keyphrases
- drinking water
- oxidative stress
- drosophila melanogaster
- cell death
- physical activity
- signaling pathway
- endothelial cells
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- high fat diet induced
- health risk
- transcription factor
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- diabetic rats
- microbial community
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- multiple sclerosis
- mild cognitive impairment
- white matter
- human health
- wild type
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- case control
- heavy metals
- pluripotent stem cells
- reactive oxygen species