1. Mitochondrial thioredoxin reductase 2 is elevated in long-lived primate as well as rodent species and extends fly mean lifespan.
- Author
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Pickering AM, Lehr M, Gendron CM, Pletcher SD, and Miller RA
- Subjects
- Animals, Cytosol drug effects, Cytosol enzymology, Drosophila melanogaster genetics, Female, Fibroblasts cytology, Fibroblasts drug effects, Gene Expression Regulation, Glutathione Reductase genetics, Glutathione Reductase metabolism, Humans, Longevity drug effects, Male, Masoprocol pharmacology, Mice, Mitochondria drug effects, Organ Specificity, Primary Cell Culture, Primates genetics, Sex Factors, Skin cytology, Skin drug effects, Skin enzymology, Species Specificity, Thioredoxin Reductase 1 genetics, Thioredoxin Reductase 1 metabolism, Thioredoxin Reductase 2 metabolism, Thioredoxin-Disulfide Reductase, Drosophila melanogaster enzymology, Fibroblasts enzymology, Longevity genetics, Mitochondria enzymology, Primates metabolism, Thioredoxin Reductase 2 genetics
- Abstract
In a survey of enzymes related to protein oxidation and cellular redox state, we found activity of the redox enzyme thioredoxin reductase (TXNRD) to be elevated in cells from long-lived species of rodents, primates, and birds. Elevated TXNRD activity in long-lived species reflected increases in the mitochondrial form, TXNRD2, rather than the cytosolic forms TXNRD1 and TXNRD3. Analysis of published RNA-Seq data showed elevated TXNRD2 mRNA in multiple organs of longer-lived primates, suggesting that the phenomenon is not limited to skin-derived fibroblasts. Elevation of TXNRD2 activity and protein levels was also noted in liver of three different long-lived mutant mice, and in normal male mice treated with a drug that extends lifespan in males. Overexpression of mitochondrial TXNRD2 in Drosophila melanogaster extended median (but not maximum) lifespan in female flies with a small lifespan extension in males; in contrast, overexpression of the cytosolic form, TXNRD1, did not produce a lifespan extension., (© 2017 The Authors. Aging Cell published by the Anatomical Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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