Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
Insulin Signaling and Dietary Restriction Differentially Influence the Decline of Learning and Memory with Age
Amanda Kauffman, Jasmine M. Ashraf, M. Ryan Corces, J. Landis, Coleen T. Murphy
PLoS Biology · 2010 · ▲ 304 citations
Abstract
Of all the age-related declines, memory loss is one of the most devastating. While conditions that increase longevity have been identified, the effects of these longevity-promoting factors on learning and memory are unknown. Here we show that the C. elegans Insulin/IGF-1 receptor mutant daf-2 improves memory performance early in adulthood and maintains learning ability better with age but, surprisingly, demonstrates no extension in long-term memory with age. By contrast, eat-2 mutants, a model of Dietary Restriction (DR), exhibit impaired long-term memory in young adulthood but maintain this level of memory longer with age. We find that crh-1, the C. elegans homolog of the CREB transcription factor, is required for long-term associative memory, but not for learning or short-term memory. The expression of crh-1 declines with age and differs in the longevity mutants, and CREB expression and activity correlate with memory performance. Our results suggest that specific longevity treatments have acute and long-term effects on cognitive functions that decline with age through their regulation of rate-limiting genes required for learning and memory.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pbio.1000372
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-15 MST
Cite this
APA
Kauffman, A., Ashraf, J.M., Corces, M.R., Landis, J., & Murphy, C.T. (2010). Insulin Signaling and Dietary Restriction Differentially Influence the Decline of Learning and Memory with Age. <em>PLoS Biology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000372
Vancouver
Kauffman A, Ashraf JM, Corces MR, Landis J, Murphy CT. Insulin Signaling and Dietary Restriction Differentially Influence the Decline of Learning and Memory with Age. PLoS Biology. 2010. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000372.
BibTeX
@article{amanda2010Insuli,
title = {Insulin Signaling and Dietary Restriction Differentially Influence the Decline of Learning and Memory with Age},
author = {Amanda Kauffman and Jasmine M. Ashraf and M. Ryan Corces and J. Landis and Coleen T. Murphy},
journal = {PLoS Biology},
year = {2010},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pbio.1000372},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Aging Cell 2010
Open access · OA
Dietary restriction affects lifespan but not cognitive aging in <i>Drosophila melanogaster</i>
PLoS Genetics 2005
Open access · CC-BY
New Genes Tied to Endocrine, Metabolic, and Dietary Regulation of Lifespan from a Caenorhabditis elegans Genomic RNAi Screen
Science 2001
Citation only
Regulation of Longevity and Stress Resistance by Sch9 in Yeast
Aging 2016
Open access · CC-BY
Decreased mTOR signalling reduces mitochondrial ROS in brain via accumulation of the telomerase protein TERT within mitochondria
Annals of Internal Medicine 2023
Preprint · OA
Time-Restricted Eating Without Calorie Counting for Weight Loss in a Racially Diverse Population
Journal of Neuroscience 2022
Open access · OA