RRC ID 22045
Author Scherfer C, Han VC, Wang Y, Anderson AE, Galko MJ.
Title Autophagy drives epidermal deterioration in a Drosophila model of tissue aging.
Journal Aging (Albany NY)
Abstract Organismal lifespan has been the primary readout in aging research. However, how longevity genes control tissue-specific aging remains an open question. To examine the crosstalk between longevity programs and specific tissues during aging, biomarkers of organ-specific aging are urgently needed. Since the earliest signs of aging occur in the skin, we sought to examine skin aging in a genetically tractable model. Here we introduce a Drosophila model of skin aging. The epidermis undergoes a dramatic morphological deterioration with age that includes membrane and nuclear loss. These changes were decelerated in a long-lived mutant and accelerated in a short-lived mutant. An increase in autophagy markers correlated with epidermal aging. Finally, the epidermis of Atg7 mutants retained younger characteristics, suggesting that autophagy is a critical driver of epidermal aging. This is surprising given that autophagy is generally viewed as protective during aging. Since Atg7 mutants are short-lived, the deceleration of epidermal aging in this mutant suggests that in the epidermis healthspan can be uncoupled from longevity. Because the aging readout we introduce here has an early onset and is easily visualized, genetic dissection using our model should identify other novel mechanisms by which lifespan genes feed into tissue-specific aging.
Volume 5(4)
Pages 276-87
Published 2013-4-1
DOI 10.18632/aging.100549
PII 100549
Description PMC3651520
PMID 23599123
PMC PMC3651520
MeSH Aging / physiology* Animals Autophagy / physiology* Autophagy-Related Protein 7 Biomarkers Drosophila / physiology* Drosophila Proteins / genetics Drosophila Proteins / metabolism Gene Expression Regulation / physiology Integumentary System Physiological Phenomena* Mutation Vertebrates / physiology
IF 4.831
Times Cited 13
WOS Category CELL BIOLOGY
Resource
Drosophila