http://www.the-scientist.com/homepage.htm

http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20040819/02

Bacteria help DrosophilaFly lifespan is boosted by early exposure to
bacteria, but curbed by presence late in life 

| By Melissa Phillips


When Drosophila melanogaster are shielded from bacteria during their
first week of adulthood, their lives are shortened by a third, says a
study published in PNAS this week. Eliminating the same bacteria late in
adulthood, however, increases the flies' longevity. The authors also
show that genetic mutations associated with longevity can modulate the
effects of bacteria on lifespan.

"I wasn't surprised, but I was excited," Daniel Promislow of the
University of Georgia said of the results. "I think this is just the
beginning. A few years from now, we're going to look back and have a lot
of really interesting data on the roles that parasites play" in organism
lifespan, said Promislow, who was not involved in the study.

Ted Brummel of Sam Houston State University in Texas and his former
colleagues at CalTech raised Drosophila in axenic conditions by treating
eggs with bleach and ethanol and then keeping the flies in a germ-free
environment with sterilized food. Flies that live under these conditions
suffer lifespans shortened by about 30%. In a parallel set of
experiments, Drosophila with bacteria eliminated from their bodies by
antibiotic treatment lived 35% shorter lives.

To pin down a critical period for bacterial exposure, the researchers
then raised flies in sterile conditions and exposed them to bacteria at
various time points after metamorphosis. Conversely, they also raised
flies in normal conditions and then transferred them to
antibiotic-containing food after adult emergence.

If flies were exposed to bacteria within the first 4 to 7 days of
adulthood, they lived normal-length lives. If they were kept axenic for
this first week, subsequent addition of bacteria made no
difference-longevity was reduced by 30%.

At metamorphosis, a pulse of the steroid hormone ecdysone initiates the
shift from larval to adult structures, resulting in fat body transition,
upregulation of immune genes, and gut remodeling. Most larval bacteria
are destroyed during this process, according to Brummel. "The window at
which the bacteria are important is actually the period in which the fly
would re-expose itself to bacteria," Brummel told The Scientist.

The critical bacterial exposure period also overlaps nicely with the
transition from larval to adult fat, Brummel said, and the Drosophila
fat body has been shown to regulate longevity through insulin-related
signaling pathways. It makes sense that bacteria could feed into these
pathways, Brummel said, but "at this point, it's just a correlation."

Brummel's group found the opposite effect on longevity when bacteria
were removed late in fly life. Flies fed antibiotic-containing food
during the fourth week of adulthood lived about 10% longer than those
that ate normal food.

"What we think is the case there is simply that the animal's fitness
has been reduced to a point where bacteria that are normally not a big
threat to the animal become more dangerous," Brummel said.

"These results are fantastic," said Margaret McFall-Ngai of the
University of Wisconsin-Madison. Because most animals evolved in
microbe-rich seas, "the selection pressure by bacteria has been
intense," McFall-Ngai said. "It's not surprising to me that the presence
of environmental bacteria would be incorporated into the biological
program of an animal."

Brummel's team also looked at bacteria deprivation in longevity
mutants. The Drosophila mutant EcR, which has a mutation in the ecdysone
receptor gene, is long-lived as a heterozygote. Unlike normal flies,
these mutants did not suffer reduced longevity with lifelong antibiotic
treatment.

Out of a series of other long-lived mutants, one called DJ817 showed
different effects from either wildtype or EcR flies: They lived 30%
longer than wildtype flies when bacteria were present, but were no
different from wildtype in the absence of bacteria. The genetic basis of
the DJ817 phenotype has not been fully characterized.

"The idea of putting together parasites and aging in a genetic or
evolutionary context is a pretty new one," said Promislow. "In the
equation that puts together genes and longevity, it may turn out that
parasites are a critical variable that we haven't considered until
now."

Links for this article
T. Brummel et al., "Drosophila lifespan enhancement by exogenous
bacteria," PNAS, 2004. 
http://www.pnas.org 

Daniel Promislow
http://www.genetics.uga.edu/faculty/bioPromislow.html 

Benzer Laboratory
http://benzerserver.caltech.edu/ 

P. Tzou et al., "How Drosophila combats microbial infection: a model to
study innate immunity and host-pathogen interactions, Curr Opin
Microbiol, 5:102-110, February 2002.
[PubMed Abstract] [Publisher Full Text]  

D.S. Hwangbo et al., "Drosophila dFOXO controls lifespan and regulates
insulin signalling in brain and fat body," Nature, 429:562-566, June 3,
2004.
[PubMed Abstract] [Publisher Full Text]  

Margaret McFall-Ngai
http://www.medmicro.wisc.edu/department/faculty/mcfall-ngai.html 

A.F. Simon et al., "Steroid control of longevity in Drosophila
melanogaster," Science, 299:1407-1410, February 28, 2003.
[PubMed Abstract] [Publisher Full Text]  

©2004, The Scientist Inc. in association with BioMed Central.


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