Where am I? > Home > News > Health

A 'spoonful of sugar' makes the worms' life span go down

Science Centric | 4 November 2009 14:03 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Leave a comment Decrease text size Increase text size
DON'T MISS —
A new type of stem cells found in prostate may be involved in cancer
A new type of stem cells found in prostate may be involved in cancer — [9 Sep 2009] — A new type of stem cell found in the prostate of adult mice can be a source of prostate cancer, according to a new study...
Study reveals new genetic culprit in deadly skin cancer
Study reveals new genetic culprit in deadly skin cancer — [30 Aug 2009] — Drawing on the power of DNA sequencing, National Institutes of Health researchers have identified a new group of genetic...
New technique could eliminate inherited mitochondrial disease
New technique could eliminate inherited mitochondrial disease — [26 Aug 2009] — Researchers have developed an experimental technique with the potential to prevent a class of hereditary disorders passed...
Researchers find target for pulmonary fibrosis
Researchers find target for pulmonary fibrosis — [23 Aug 2009] — A diagnosis of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis is not much better than a death sentence: there is no treatment and the survival...
More Health...

If worms are any indication, all the sugar in your diet could spell much more than obesity and type 2 diabetes. Researchers reporting in the November issue of Cell Metabolism, a Cell Press publication, say it might also be taking years off your life.

By adding just a small amount of glucose to C. elegans usual fare of straight bacteria, they found the worms lose about 20 percent of their usual life span. They trace the effect to insulin signals, which can block other life-extending molecular players.

Although the findings are in worms, Cynthia Kenyon of the University of California, San Francisco, says there are known to be many similarities between worms and people in the insulin signalling pathways. (As an aside, Kenyon says she read up on low-carb diets and changed her eating habits immediately - cutting out essentially all starches and desserts - after making the initial discovery in worms. The discovery was made several years ago, but had not been reported in a peer-reviewed journal until now.)

'In the early 90s, we discovered mutations that could double the normal life span of worms,' Kenyon said. Those mutations effected insulin signals. Specifically, a mutation in a gene known as daf-2 slowed ageing and doubled life span. That longer life depended on another 'FOXO transcription factor' called DAF-16 and the heat shock factor HSF-1.

Now, the researchers show that those same players are also involved in numbering the days of worms who are fed on glucose. In fact, glucose makes no difference to the life span of worms that lack DAF-16 or HSF-1, they show. Glucose also completely prevents the life-extending benefits that would otherwise come with mutations in the daf-2 gene.

Ultimately, worms fed a steady diet containing glucose show a reduction in aquaporin channels that transport glycerol, one of the ingredients in the process by which the body produces its own glucose. 'If there is not enough glucose, the body makes it with glycerol,' Kenyon explained. That glycerol has to first get where it needs to go, which it does via the aquaporin channels.

Further studies are needed to see if these same effects of sugar can be seen in mice, or even people. But there is reason to think they may.

'Although we do not fully understand the mechanism by which glucose shortens the life span of C. elegans, the fact that the two mammalian aquaporin glycerol-transporting channels are downregulated by insulin raises the possibility that glucose may have a life-span-shortening effect in humans, and, conversely, that a diet with a low glycaemic index may extend human life span,' the researchers write. Kenyon also points to recent studies that have linked particular FOXO variants to longevity in several human populations, making the pathway the first with clear effects on human ageing.

She says the findings may also have implications for drugs now in development for the treatment of diabetes, which are meant to block glucose production by inhibiting glycerol channels. The new findings 'raise a flag' that glycerol channels might be doing something else, she says, and that drugs designed to block them might have a downside.

Source: Cell Press

Gram stain of enterotoxigenic B. fragilis (ETBF) under oil immersion, (c) Shaoguang WuHow diarrhoeal bacteria cause some colon cancers

— 23 August 2009

Johns Hopkins scientists say they have figured out how bacteria that cause diarrhoea may also be the culprit in some colon cancers. The investigators say that strains of the common... — full story

The hyperdiploid leukaemia blast cells have large nuclei containing the genetic material which stains purple. The blasts are surrounded by smaller pale red blood cells which do not have nuclei, (c) Tina MotroniInherited risk factors increase odds of developing childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia

— 16 August 2009

Scientists at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have identified inherited variations in two genes that account for 37 percent of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), including... — full story

Microscope image of brown fat (e-BAT, or engineered Brown Adipose Tissue) created by adding a key control switch to skin cells of mice. Presence of green-stained objects (droplets of oil stored in the cell) confirms the skin cells have been converted to brown fat-producing cells. Blue objects are cell nuclei, (c) Shingo Kajimura, PhD, Dana-Farber Cancer InstituteScientists create energy-burning brown fat in mice

— 29 July 2009

Researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have shown that they can engineer mouse and human cells to produce brown fat, a natural energy-burning type of fat that counteracts obesity.... — full story

A scanning electron micrograph image of the paired adult Schistosoma japonicum worms, where the female worm is embraced in the gynecophoral canal of the male worm, (c) Don McManus, Queensland Institute of Medical SciencesGenome of parasitic flatworm that causes schistosomiasis decoded

— 15 July 2009

An international team of scientists has sequenced the genome of Schistosoma mansoni, a parasitic worm, commonly known as a blood fluke, that infects 210 million in 76 countries through... — full story


Popular tags in Health: cancer · diabetes · malaria · obesity