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High stability of blood parameters during mouse lifespan: sex-specific effects of every-other-day fasting.

Maria M BayliakOksana M SorochynskaOksana V KuzniakIvanna Z DrohomyretskaAndriy Ya KlonovskyiAnastasia O HrushchenkoMyroslava V VatashchukNadia M MosiichukKenneth B StoreyOlga GaraschukVolodymyr I Lushchak
Published in: Biogerontology (2022)
Every-other-day fasting (EODF) is one type of caloric restriction that is proposed to have significant health benefits, including slowing aging-related processes. The present study evaluated multiple parameters of blood homeostasis comparing mice of different ages and mice on different diet regimes: ad libitum (AL) versus EODF. Hematological and classical biochemical parameters of blood were measured in young (6-month), middle-aged (12-month) and old (18-month) C57BL/6J mice of both sexes subjected either to EODF, or AL feeding. Middle-aged AL males showed a decrease in erythrocyte and total leucocyte counts and an increase in plasma alkaline phosphatase activity, whereas old animals showed a decrease in relative levels of lymphocytes and an increase in relative levels of neutrophils, a decrease in plasma lactate and an increase in total cholesterol levels, compared to young mice. AL-fed females demonstrated higher stability of blood parameters during aging than males did. The EODF regimen did not significantly affect hematological parameters in females but prevented a decline in total leukocyte count with age in males. In both sexes, EODF partially prevented age-associated changes in levels of plasma lactate and cholesterol and activity of alkaline phosphatase. Thus, during normal aging, mice showed a sex-dependent maintenance of blood homeostasis which was not significantly affected by EODF.
Keyphrases
  • middle aged
  • high fat diet induced
  • insulin resistance
  • peripheral blood
  • public health
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • wild type
  • blood glucose
  • risk assessment
  • adipose tissue
  • health information
  • human health