Aging-associated debilitation is a primary source of human misery. Healthy life spans in mammalian models can be increased by dietary and genetic means; however, no effective intervention applicable to humans has yet been validated in mammals. Human trials for """"""""anti-aging"""""""" treatments are unlikely to proceed without such validation, which is the purpose of this RFA. The following aims are designed to definitively identify effective anti-aging interventions and to rule out those that are ineffective.
Aim 1 : To verify that potential anti-aging interventions produce their expected biological effects. For anti-inflammatory agents (corticosterone, ibuprofin, celecoxib), insulin sensitizing agents (CL316,243, rosiglitazone), agents that promote mitochondrial function or suppress oxidative damage (R-alpha lipoic acid, L-carnitine), and for multi-functional phytochemicals, the following will be determined: doses and modes of administration that produce biological effects, both short and long term, without toxicity or a decrease in food consumption.
Aim 2 : To test the hypotheses that potential anti-aging interventions in these three categories actually retard aging in biological systems and increase life spans. Noninvasive, longitudinal measures are made of growth, immune cells, insulin/glucose, collagen, healing and urine. Because aging is multifactorial, combinations of interventions proven in Aim 1 also will be tested.
Aim 3 : To confirm and augment the conclusions regarding interventions successful in the first phase of the program. Whether interventions that increase maximum life span also retard expression of aging in the following biological systems will be tested: Neurobehavorial/sensory, mitochondrial, gene expression and protein modification, followed by detailed histopathological analyses. Results in these systems may suggest mechanisms by which the interventions retard aging.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01AG022308-02
Application #
6736349
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAG1-ZIJ-9 (J2))
Program Officer
Sierra, Felipe
Project Start
2003-04-15
Project End
2008-06-30
Budget Start
2004-07-01
Budget End
2005-06-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2004
Total Cost
$448,250
Indirect Cost
Name
Jackson Laboratory
Department
Type
DUNS #
042140483
City
Bar Harbor
State
ME
Country
United States
Zip Code
04609
Reifsnyder, Peter C; Ryzhov, Sergey; Flurkey, Kevin et al. (2018) Cardioprotective effects of dietary rapamycin on adult female C57BLKS/J-Leprdb mice. Ann N Y Acad Sci 1418:106-117
Lee, Benjamin P; Buri?, Ivana; George-Pandeth, Anupriya et al. (2017) MicroRNAs miR-203-3p, miR-664-3p and miR-708-5p are associated with median strain lifespan in mice. Sci Rep 7:44620
Nadon, Nancy L; Strong, Randy; Miller, Richard A et al. (2017) NIA Interventions Testing Program: Investigating Putative Aging Intervention Agents in a Genetically Heterogeneous Mouse Model. EBioMedicine 21:3-4
Reifsnyder, Peter C; Flurkey, Kevin; Te, Austen et al. (2016) Rapamycin treatment benefits glucose metabolism in mouse models of type 2 diabetes. Aging (Albany NY) 8:3120-3130
Thompson, Airlia C S; Bruss, Matthew D; Price, John C et al. (2016) Reduced in vivo hepatic proteome replacement rates but not cell proliferation rates predict maximum lifespan extension in mice. Aging Cell 15:118-27
Lee, Benjamin P; Pilling, Luke C; Emond, Florence et al. (2016) Changes in the expression of splicing factor transcripts and variations in alternative splicing are associated with lifespan in mice and humans. Aging Cell 15:903-13
Strong, Randy; Miller, Richard A; Antebi, Adam et al. (2016) Longer lifespan in male mice treated with a weakly estrogenic agonist, an antioxidant, an ?-glucosidase inhibitor or a Nrf2-inducer. Aging Cell 15:872-84
Yuan, Rong; Gatti, Daniel M; Krier, Rebecca et al. (2015) Genetic Regulation of Female Sexual Maturation and Longevity Through Circulating IGF1. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 70:817-26
Gong, Huan; Qian, Hong; Ertl, Robin et al. (2015) Histone modifications change with age, dietary restriction and rapamycin treatment in mouse brain. Oncotarget 6:15882-90
Miller, Richard A; Harrison, David E; Astle, Clinton M et al. (2014) Rapamycin-mediated lifespan increase in mice is dose and sex dependent and metabolically distinct from dietary restriction. Aging Cell 13:468-77

Showing the most recent 10 out of 22 publications