Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Caloric restriction or resveratrol supplementation and ageing in a non-human primate: first-year outcome of the RESTRIKAL study in Microcebus murinus

Alexandre Dal‐Pan, Jérémy Terrien, Fabien Pifferi, Roger Botalla, Isabelle Hardy, Julia Marchal, Alexandre Zahariev, Isabelle Chery, Philippe Zizzari, Martine Perret, Jean Luc Picq, Jacques Epelbaum, Stéphane Blanc, Fabienne Aujard

AGE · 2010 · ▲ 61 citations

Abstract

A life-long follow-up of physiological and behavioural functions was initiated in 38-month-old mouse lemurs (Microcebus murinus) to test whether caloric restriction(definition) (CR) or a potential mimetic compound, resveratrol (RSV), can delay the ageing process and the onset of age-related diseases. Based on their potential survival of 12 years, mouse lemurs were assigned to three different groups: a control (CTL) group fed ad libitum, a CR group fed 70% of the CTL caloric intake and a RSV group (200 mg/kg.day(-1)) fed ad libitum. Since this prosimian primate exhibits a marked annual rhythm in body mass gain during winter, animals were tested throughout the year to assess body composition, daily energy expenditure (DEE), resting metabolic rate (RMR), physical activity and hormonal levels. After 1 year, all mouse lemurs seemed in good health. CR animals showed a significantly decreased body mass compared with the other groups during long day period only. CR or RSV treatments did not affect body composition. CR induced a decrease in DEE without changes in RMR, whereas RSV induced a concomitant increase in DEE and RMR without any obvious modification of locomotor activity in both groups. Hormonal levels remained similar in each group. In summary, after 1 year of treatment CR and RSV induced differential metabolic responses but animals successfully acclimated to their imposed diets. The RESTRIKAL study can now be safely undertaken on a long-term basis to determine whether age-associated alterations in mouse lemurs are delayed with CR and if RSV can mimic these effects.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1007/s11357-010-9156-6
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-15 MST

Cite this

APA
Dal‐Pan, A., Terrien, J., Pifferi, F., Botalla, R., Hardy, I., Marchal, J., Zahariev, A., Chery, I., Zizzari, P., Perret, M., Picq, J.L., Epelbaum, J., Blanc, S., &amp; Aujard, F. (2010). Caloric restriction or resveratrol supplementation and ageing in a non-human primate: first-year outcome of the RESTRIKAL study in Microcebus murinus. <em>AGE</em>. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11357-010-9156-6
Vancouver
Dal‐Pan A, Terrien J, Pifferi F, Botalla R, Hardy I, Marchal J, et al. Caloric restriction or resveratrol supplementation and ageing in a non-human primate: first-year outcome of the RESTRIKAL study in Microcebus murinus. AGE. 2010. doi:10.1007/s11357-010-9156-6.
BibTeX
@article{alexandre2010Calori, title = {Caloric restriction or resveratrol supplementation and ageing in a non-human primate: first-year outcome of the RESTRIKAL study in Microcebus murinus}, author = {Alexandre Dal‐Pan and Jérémy Terrien and Fabien Pifferi and Roger Botalla and Isabelle Hardy and Julia Marchal and Alexandre Zahariev and Isabelle Chery and Philippe Zizzari and Martine Perret and Jean Luc Picq and Jacques Epelbaum and Stéphane Blanc and Fabienne Aujard}, journal = {AGE}, year = {2010}, doi = {10.1007/s11357-010-9156-6}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings