Caloric restriction and resveratrol promote longevity through the Sirtuin-1-dependent induction of autophagy

Eugenia Morselli(Inserm), Maria Chiara Maiuri(Université Paris-Sud), Maria Markaki(Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas), Evgenia Megalou(Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas), Angela Pasparaki(Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas), Konstantinos Palikaras(Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas), Alfredo Criollo(Université Paris-Sud), Lorenzo Galluzzi(Université Paris-Sud), Shoaib Ahmad Malik(Université Paris-Sud), Ilio Vitale(Université Paris-Sud), Mickaël Michaud(Université Paris-Sud), Frank Madeo(University of Graz), N Tavernarakis(Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas), Guido Kroemer(Université Paris-Sud)
Cell Death and Disease
January 14, 2010
Cited by 601Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Caloric restriction and autophagy-inducing pharmacological agents can prolong lifespan in model organisms including mice, flies, and nematodes. In this study, we show that transgenic expression of Sirtuin-1 induces autophagy in human cells in vitro and in Caenorhabditis elegans in vivo. The knockdown or knockout of Sirtuin-1 prevented the induction of autophagy by resveratrol and by nutrient deprivation in human cells as well as by dietary restriction in C. elegans. Conversely, Sirtuin-1 was not required for the induction of autophagy by rapamycin or p53 inhibition, neither in human cells nor in C. elegans. The knockdown or pharmacological inhibition of Sirtuin-1 enhanced the vulnerability of human cells to metabolic stress, unless they were stimulated to undergo autophagy by treatment with rapamycin or p53 inhibition. Along similar lines, resveratrol and dietary restriction only prolonged the lifespan of autophagy-proficient nematodes, whereas these beneficial effects on longevity were abolished by the knockdown of the essential autophagic modulator Beclin-1. We conclude that autophagy is universally required for the lifespan-prolonging effects of caloric restriction and pharmacological Sirtuin-1 activators.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis