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Every-other-day feeding extends lifespan but fails to delay many symptoms of aging in mice
Kan Xie, Frauke Neff, Astrid Markert, Jan Rozman, Juan Antonio Aguilar‐Pimentel, Oana V. Amarie, Lore Becker, Robert Brommage, Lillian Garrett, Kristin S. Henzel, Sabine M. Hölter, Dirk Janik, Isabelle Lehmann, Kristin Moreth, Brandon L. Pearson
Nature Communications · 2017 · ▲ 116 citations
Abstract
Dietary restriction regimes extend lifespan in various animal models. Here we show that longevity in male C57BL/6J mice subjected to every-other-day feeding is associated with a delayed onset of neoplastic disease that naturally limits lifespan in these animals. We compare more than 200 phenotypes in over 20 tissues in aged animals fed with a lifelong every-other-day feeding or ad libitum access to food diet to determine whether molecular, cellular, physiological and histopathological aging features develop more slowly in every-other-day feeding mice than in controls. We also analyze the effects of every-other-day feeding on young mice on shorter-term every-other-day feeding or ad libitum to account for possible aging-independent restriction effects. Our large-scale analysis reveals overall only limited evidence for a retardation of the aging rate in every-other-day feeding mice. The data indicate that every-other-day feeding-induced longevity is sufficiently explained by delays in life-limiting neoplastic disorders and is not associated with a more general slowing of the aging process in mice.Dietary restriction can extend the life of various model organisms. Here, Xie et al. show that intermittent periods of fasting achieved through every-other-day feeding protect mice against neoplastic disease but do not broadly delay organismal aging in animals.
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- 10.1038/s41467-017-00178-3
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- 2026-06-15 MST
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APA
Xie, K., Neff, F., Markert, A., Rozman, J., Aguilar‐Pimentel, J.A., Amarie, O.V., Becker, L., Brommage, R., Garrett, L., Henzel, K.S., Hölter, S.M., Janik, D., Lehmann, I., Moreth, K., Pearson, B.L., Rácz, I., Rathkolb, B., Ryan, D., Schröder, S., & Treise, I. (2017). Every-other-day feeding extends lifespan but fails to delay many symptoms of aging in mice. <em>Nature Communications</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00178-3
Vancouver
Xie K, Neff F, Markert A, Rozman J, Aguilar‐Pimentel JA, Amarie OV, et al. Every-other-day feeding extends lifespan but fails to delay many symptoms of aging in mice. Nature Communications. 2017. doi:10.1038/s41467-017-00178-3.
BibTeX
@article{kan2017Everyo,
title = {Every-other-day feeding extends lifespan but fails to delay many symptoms of aging in mice},
author = {Kan Xie and Frauke Neff and Astrid Markert and Jan Rozman and Juan Antonio Aguilar‐Pimentel and Oana V. Amarie and Lore Becker and Robert Brommage and Lillian Garrett and Kristin S. Henzel and Sabine M. Hölter and Dirk Janik and Isabelle Lehmann and Kristin Moreth and Brandon L. Pearson and Ildikó Rácz and Birgit Rathkolb and Devon Ryan and Susanne Schröder and Irina Treise and Raffi Bekeredjian and Dirk H. Busch and Jochen Graw and Gerhard Ehninger and Martin Klingenspor},
journal = {Nature Communications},
year = {2017},
doi = {10.1038/s41467-017-00178-3},
}
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