One of the  most interesting research efforts of the past few years seems to have  taken a page from the preoccupations of the self-help magazine world:  the cognitive decline of the brains of aging baby boomers and the obese  nature of their grandchildren. These topics have been united by the  well-established finding that restricting caloric intake leads to an  increased life span in almost every animal tested. Because eating habits  are formed early in life, the prediction is that a sensible diet will  increase a person’s life span. Is that true? The link between  caloric restriction and life span is certainly solid, although the jury  is still out on many of the claims made in the general media. Serious  scientists have been studying the molecular biology behind this link for  a number of years. One particular group of sequences seems to stand in  the gap between aging and food, that of the sirtuin family of genes  (also called silent information regulator [SIR] genes). One member of  the family, the SIR2 gene, has been studied in particular detail.  This article discusses age-related cognitive decline, caloric intake  restriction, and the role SIR2 plays in the process. As the brain ages It  is the canonical experience of people older than 40 that senior moments  become an increasingly familiar part of one’s thinking life. We forget  names, we forget places, we forget where we put our car keys, and we  wonder when—and why—our retrieval systems began to abandon us.  Higher-order processing begins to change as well as memory, perhaps not  as obviously, but apparently in a far more dramatic way. Although the  types of cognitive decline clearly vary from one person to the next, no  one escapes these behavioral changes completely or, perhaps, the panic  that ensues for some individuals when they compare their previous talent  with current abilities. It is axiomatic that cognitive decline  occurs because of physical changes that human brains undergo as they  age. Yet demonstrating the specifics of the relationship has not always  been easy. With the advent of more sophisticated technologies (and  improvements in older technologies), that has begun to change. We now  know that changes in the regulation of global gene expression  patterns—mostly down-shifting—are observed in a broad swath of the CNS  during aging. Gene products specifically involved in the physiological  processing of inhibitory signals mediated by γ-aminobutyric acid) have  shown particular vulnerability. These neuron-related changes are  disproportionately large when compared with changes in other tissues  (eg, kidney and muscle tissues show age-related up-regulation). Alterations  in gross neuroanatomical structure have also been observed for many  years. Some of the most dramatic involve disruptions of the myelinated  fibers that yoke disparate brain regions together to provide specific  functions—particularly in the prefrontal cortex (PFC). The changes are  generally not due to neuronal loss in the PFC, which is actually quite  minimal in most aging brains, but to loss of functional connectivity.  The accompanying disruptions of neural integration in these regions of  the aging brain result in less organized activity than is found in the  brains of youthful controls. Such alterations are thought to be  associated with a measurable behavioral change in aging populations:  disruption of executive function (a task involved in everything from  impulse control to planning for the future). This is part of a general  age-related decline in the brain’s higher-order functional abilities. One  of the challenges of studying cognitive decline in elderly populations  is separating normal changes in cognition from abnormal pathological  changes. Although these are not always easy to distinguish, examination  of the aging hippocampus has provided valuable insights. The normal  aging pattern of the hippocampus involves an inhibition of metabolic  activities of the dentate gyrus and subiculum. That is not what you see  in patients who have Alzheimer disease. At least initially, the  inhibition primarily targets the entorhinal cortex. Neuronal death in  these tissues, with a general volumetric shrinkage of the medial  temporal lobe, has been shown to distinguish the disease state from  typical aging processes. It is also a matter of calories Many  of the data presented above appear to describe natural, typical  processes. But are they inevitable? One of the first questions many  people ask after going a few rounds with their senior moment brains is:  can the decline be reversed? These are often the questions asked by  people who want to increase their life span. The surprising answer to  both questions, in a few cases described below, is yes. One of  the most remarkable discoveries in the field of life span alteration  occurred in the past century and has to do with caloric restriction.  (This does not mean caloric starvation; malnutrition does not provide  the benefit and is a completely different issue.) A controlled decrease  in the amount of calories consumed has changed the life span of a  surprising variety of animals, including mammals. It truly does mean  that if you eat less, you will live longer. The benefits of  caloric restriction have been shown to have brain-specific effects as  well. Caloric restriction can alter the regulatory genetic down-shifting  phenomenon discussed earlier. It has also been shown to change the  age-related neuronal degradation in nonhuman primates. Most relevant to  our story, caloric restriction can affect human cognitive functioning.  In one remarkable study, a caloric restriction protocol that lasted 90  days dramatically improved the verbal memories of a healthy geriatric  cohort. Caloric restriction has even been shown to inhibit  amyloid-related plaque formation in transgenic mice models of Alzheimer  disease. A matter of genes Such robust  findings work like scaffolding for researchers interested in the  molecular biology behind the aging process and have certainly piqued the  interest of people wanting to extend their life spans. What is the  molecular mechanism behind the life span–extending properties of feeling  hungry all the time? One of the earliest fruits of these research  efforts was the isolation and characterization of the SIR genes. The  SIR genes were first isolated and characterized in yeast. They are a  highly conserved family of sequences found in animals as diverse as  roundworms and humans. One intensely studied member of this family is  the SIR2 gene (Figure). How does SIR2 fit into the caloric restriction story? It was shown years ago that if you introduce SIR2  into yeast in such a fashion that you overdrive its expression, you can  increase the yeast’s life span (measured as the number of times a cell  completes a round of replication). If you severely restrict the caloric  intake of an unmanipulated yeast, you can do the same thing. If you look  for levels of SIR2 protein, you find that starvation has  elevated its activity. The association appears to be strong, both by  correlation and by direct intervention. The link between SIR2 protein and caloric restriction was first found in insects and then in mammals. Subsequent  research has muddied the waters of this otherwise seemingly tight  story, however. Other researchers failed to replicate the results of the  initial findings. Questions about various technical aspects that  provided the original findings have been raised as well. There appear to  be differences between genetic backgrounds in the primary test  vehicles, from yeast to mice. These issues have yet to be fully  resolved. Such controversies are the nature of a good research  project that, while hardly finished, has reached a certain maturity.  These controversies are not deal killers regarding the association  between the aging process and what goes in your mouth. The devil, as  they say, is in the details. The fact that these issues can be raised at  all demonstrates the enormous strides that researchers are making  regarding the association between aging and eating—two of the most  socially important issues of our time. That the arguments can revolve  around deciding how the subtraction of acetyl groups changes the cell  cycle simply shows how intimate, and how sophisticated, the progress has  become. This article originally appeared in Psychiatric Times.The SIR2 gene product functions as an NAD+-dependent deacetylase. In the presence of NAD+, SIR2 removes acetyl groups from proteins. Histone proteins are a favorite target of SIR2.  As you may recall from your undergraduate days, histones are groups of  proteins around which DNA molecules wrap themselves, somewhat like  popcorn wrapped around string. Histones are deeply involved in  regulating gene expression. Adding or subtracting subgroups to histones  can profoundly influence the expression patterns of the genes in contact  with the molecules.
References
Andrews-Hanna JR, Snyder AZ, Vincent JL, et al. Disruption of large-scale brain systems in advanced aging. Neuron. 2007;56:924-935.
Bishop NA, Lu T, Yankner BA. Neural mechanisms of ageing and cognitive decline. Nature. 2010;464:529-535.
Haigis, MC, Guarente LP. Mammalian sirtuins—emerging roles in physiology, aging and calorie restriction. Genes Dev. 2006;20:2913-2921.
Welberg L. A long and lean life. Nat Rev Neurosci. 2007;8:494-495.
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
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