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Endurance exercise and selective breeding for longevity extend Drosophila healthspan by overlapping mechanisms
Alyson Sujkowski, Brian Bazzell, Kylie Carpenter, Robert Arking, Robert Wessells
Aging · 2015 · ▲ 85 citations
Abstract
Endurance exercise has emerged as a powerful intervention that promotes healthy aging by maintaining the functional capacity of critical organ systems. In addition, long-term exercise reduces the incidence of age-related diseases in humans and in model organisms. Despite these evident benefits, the genetic pathways required for exercise interventions to achieve these effects are still relatively poorly understood. Here, we compare gene expression changes during endurance training in Drosophila melanogaster to gene expression changes during selective breeding for longevity. Microarrays indicate that 65% of gene expression changes found in flies selectively bred for longevity are also found in flies subjected to three weeks of exercise training. We find that both selective breeding and endurance training increase endurance, cardiac performance, running speed, flying height, and levels of autophagy(definition) in adipose tissue. Both interventions generally upregulate stress defense, folate metabolism, and lipase activity, while downregulating carbohydrate metabolism and odorant receptor expression. Several members of the methuselah-like (mthl) gene family are downregulated by both interventions. Knockdown of mthl-3 was sufficient to provide extension of negative geotaxis behavior, endurance and cardiac stress resistance. These results provide support for endurance exercise as a broadly acting anti-aging intervention and confirm that exercise training acts in part by targeting longevity assurance pathways.
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- 10.18632/aging.100789
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- 2026-06-13 MST
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APA
Sujkowski, A., Bazzell, B., Carpenter, K., Arking, R., & Wessells, R. (2015). Endurance exercise and selective breeding for longevity extend Drosophila healthspan by overlapping mechanisms. <em>Aging</em>. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.100789
Vancouver
Sujkowski A, Bazzell B, Carpenter K, Arking R, Wessells R. Endurance exercise and selective breeding for longevity extend Drosophila healthspan by overlapping mechanisms. Aging. 2015. doi:10.18632/aging.100789.
BibTeX
@article{alyson2015Endura,
title = {Endurance exercise and selective breeding for longevity extend Drosophila healthspan by overlapping mechanisms},
author = {Alyson Sujkowski and Brian Bazzell and Kylie Carpenter and Robert Arking and Robert Wessells},
journal = {Aging},
year = {2015},
doi = {10.18632/aging.100789},
}
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