Heat shock proteins in long-lived worms and mice with insulin/insulin-Like signaling mutations
Abstract
Heat shock proteins (HSPs) have proven to be effective tools for extending invertebrate lifespan, and inC. elegans daf-2 mutants, longevity resulting from loss of insulin / insulin-like signals is at least partly dependent upon elevated HSP expression. In mice, inhibition of the orthologous growth hormone / insulin-like growth factor I (GH / IGF-I) pathway has similar pro-longevity effects. A recent study, however, suggests that loss of GH / IGF-I signals in long-lived mice does not broadly elevate HSP expression, but in fact decreases HSP expression in many tissue types, such as liver and kidney. The contribution of chaperones to the longevity of long-lived mice with altered GH / IGF-I signals may therefore differ from that described in C. elegans daf-2 mutants. This result, in combination with other recent findings, underscores the possibility that systemic overexpression of chaperones will have dissimilar effects on longevity in vertebrate and invertebrate systems.
Heat shock proteins (HSPs) have gained
prominence in aging research and are thought to be of importance for both
longevity and overall maintenance of proteome integrity with advancing age. The
most compelling evidence so far has been collected from invertebrate models, in
which it was found that longevity and thermotolerance were joint effects of
certain mutations [1,2], and that brief exposure to mild heat stress at a
young age increased both HSP expression and organismic lifespan [3]. These
investigations prompted studies of specific HSPs and their effects, and it was
soon discovered, in D. melanogaster, that the hormesis effect of mild
heat shock on survival was enhanced within transgenic strains carrying extra
copies of the Hsp70 gene [4]. These results served to spark a broader
interest in HSPs and their possible role in aging pathology, and it was soon
found that systemic and lifelong overexpression of HSP-encoding genes could
increase lifespan in Drosophila [5-8], as well as C. elegans
[9-11]. The relevance of these observations to basic
aging research was reinforced by the finding that loss of insulin /
insulin-like signaling (IIS), the most robust pro-longevity genetic manipulation
currently known, partly influenced longevity by modulating HSP expression,
particularly the low molecular weight small HSPs [10,12,13]. Most notably,
Hsu et al. [12] showed that expression of hsp-16.1, hsp-16.49, hsp-12.6
and sip-1 were all elevated in daf-2 mutant worms, and that
expression of each HSP was required for the full effect of daf-2 on
lifespan. Taken together, these observations, appeared consistent with a
"chaperone overload" theory of aging [14], which proposed that HSP
activity was critical for maintenance of proteostasis, such that increased HSP
abundance could indeed contribute to lengthened lifespan and reduction of
age-related disease [15].
While
efforts to increase invertebrate lifespan by augmenting HSP abundance have
often been successful, it has not been demonstrated that systemic and lifelong
HSP overexpression can extend mammalian lifespan. However, the overexpression
of certain HSPs can ameliorate specific types of age-related pathology in
laboratory rodents, including decline in muscle function [16], accumulation of
toxic tau aggregates in neural tissue [17], development of insulin resistance
[18], oxidative stress damage [19], and activation of inflammatory pathways
[20], suggesting that results from invertebrate studies can indeed provide a
useful guide for exploring the involvement of HSPs in vertebrate aging, and
possibly, longevity. In bridging the gap between invertebrate and vertebrate
models, the regulation of HSP expression by IIS provides a good starting point,
given that the IIS pathway has effects on lifespan and a broad spectrum of
age-related diseases that are in fact conserved across species [21]. In the C.
elegans model, loss of IIS increases expression of small HSPs [12,22], as
well as HSPs of larger size [23,24], possibly by enhancing binding of both
daf-16 (FOXO) and HSF to promoter regions of HSP-encoding genes [12]. Each of
these molecular components has orthologous elements in mice, although the
mammalian system also differs in some key respects. In particular, circulating
IGF-I levels in mice are linked to GH, such that both hormones are considered
part of the same GH / IGF-I endocrine axis. Despite this difference, however,
loss of GH / IGF-I signaling in mice has effects on lifespan that parallel loss
of IIS in C. elegans and Drosophila, as exemplified by a series
of long-lived dwarf mouse models, including the GH-deficient Pit1(dw/dw)
("Snell") and Prop1(df/df) ("Ames")
mice, the GH-insensitive Ghr(-/-) mice, and the PappA(-/-) mouse
with localized reductions in IGF-I signaling [25]. It is therefore intriguing
to ask whether such mutant mice, like the C. elegansdaf-2
mutants, have elevated HSP expression levels, and whether such HSP expression
patterns contribute to their aging-related phenotypes, as well as to their
stress resistance properties [26].
Regulation
of HSP expression by endocrine signals in long-lived mice
The chaperone activity of HSPs is
critical for recovery from stress and cellular insults, but HSPs have diverse
functions that are of importance even in the absence of an external stress
condition, including cellular transport, peptide synthesis and modulation of
key cell signaling pathways [20,27]. It is hardly surprising, in this sense,
that systemic mechanisms would have evolved to enable precise control of the
abundance and distribution of HSPs across major organ systems, and that this
control might be accomplished through a circulating neuroendocrine factor. With
these expectations in mind, and in view of the known effects of IIS on HSP
expression in C. elegans, Swindell et al. [28] have recently examined
the effects of the Pit1(dw/dw) and Ghr(-/-)
mutations on HSP expression patterns in six different tissue types in the
laboratory mouse (liver, kidney, heart, lung, muscle and neocortex). These
mutations were of interest, since both lead to reduced IGF-I levels in
circulation, as well as increased lifespan, presumably through mechanisms that
would parallel those associated with the C. elegans daf-2 mutation.
Surprisingly, however, effects of these mutations on gene expression varied
among HSP-encoding genes, among tissue types, and with little unifying pattern.
Rather than having widely elevated HSP expression levels, long-lived dwarf mice
were instead a mosaic of both elevated and depressed HSP mRNAs, depending upon
the tissue examined and the particular HSP target evaluated [28]. The specific
role of GH / IGF-I in these expression patterns was evaluated by comparisons
between Pit1(dw/dw) and Ghr(-/-) mutants, and in
general, it was only the declines of HSP expression resulting from Pit1(dw/dw)
that were also shared by Ghr(-/-), particularly in liver and kidney.
Unexpectedly, therefore, these results suggested that expression of some HSPs
was positively related to GH / IGF-I signals, and this notion was further
supported by the observation that a six-week treatment of GH injections
increased hepatic expression of Hsph1 (Hsp110), Hspa5 (Bip),Dnajb11 and Dnajc3 (p58IPK) in the GH-deficient Ames dwarf
mouse [28]. The picture that has emerged from these studies, therefore, is one
of complex HSP regulation in vivo, with GH / IGF-I either indirectly or
directly acting to modulate the expression of at least some HSP-encoding genes,
but no generalized or systemic induction of HSP expression in long-lived dwarf
mice.
Should
we conclude that the C. elegans system provides a poor mammalian
analogue for investigating the contributions of HSPs to age-related pathology,
and that alterations in HSP expression contribute to increased survivorship of daf-2
mutants in a fashion that is unparalleled in long-lived dwarf mice? Certainly
not. Above all else, it is clear that, in mice, broad and general conclusions
regarding the interaction between HSPs and longevity mutations are apt to be
hazardous. This reflects, in part, the fact that there is considerable
diversity among HSPs, both in terms of function and their regulation, such that
only subsets of certain HSPs are likely to be co-regulated in vivo. On balance,
there appears to be a stronger tendency for loss of GH / IGF-I signaling to
decrease HSP expression in mice, rather than to increase it, but some patterns
are in line with the C. elegans model. For instance, the
alpha-crystallin HSP Cryab, which is orthologous to the C. elegans
Hsp-16 small HSPs [29], is increased by Pit1(dw/dw) in
cardiac tissue, and two other small HSP genes (Hspb7 and Hspb8)
were increased by both Pit1(dw/dw) and Ghr(-/-) in
lung [28]. Another important consideration is that, in daf-2 mutants,
differences in HSP expression between mutant and wild-type worms are amplified
by an external stress condition [12,22], suggesting the involvement of
stress-activated regulatory factors, such as heat shock factor (HSF). It is
indeed possible that, in long-lived dwarf mice, although basal HSP expression
is generally lower, this is perhaps associated with a more robust heat shock
response, such that under a stress condition, loss of GH / IGF-I signals would
serve to augment HSP expression [30]. While intriguing, this idea has not, so
far, been supported by investigations of HSP stress-response patterns in
fibroblast cells from long-lived Pit1(dw/dw) mice [28,31].
We can be assured that further work will
reveal more impressive similarities, and differences, between the influence of
mouse and C. elegans IIS longevity mutations on HSPs, both in terms of
HSP function and transcriptional regulation. Interestingly, for example, it was
recently found that mutant C. elegans worms lacking the AFD sensory
neuron exhibited an altered heat shock response in somatic cells, even though
such cells were not directly innervated by this sensory neuron [32]. In worms,
therefore, machinery regulating HSP expression is partly under neuronal
control, and it appears that a type of neuroendocrine signal mediates between
sensory neurons and somatic cells to allow control of HSP expression under
stress [32]. It will be of much interest to determine whether there exists
parallelism between such, as yet unidentified, neuroendocrine signals in C.
elegans, and the regulation of HSP expression by GH / IGF-I signals in
mice. At the same time, it will be illuminating to develop and clarify a model
by which HSP expression is regulated by GH / IGF-I signals in mice. For
instance, it is necessary to understand whether GH / IGF-I signals are a direct
modulator of HSP expression, and if not, which intermediate pathways act as
secondary signals. It is indeed possible that effects of GH / IGF-I signals on
in vivo HSP expression are very indirect, and mediated by metabolic responses to
circulating GH / IGF-I (e.g. increased muscle mass, improved insulin
sensitivity). It will also be important to evaluate whether effects of GH /
IGF-I on HSP expression are dependent upon HSF-1, although at present, the
complex shifts in HSP expression documented in GH / IGF-I mutants suggest that
a single transcription factor will not account for all modulation of HSP
transcription. Lastly, given that GH / IGF-I signals do modify HSP expression
in mice, the possibility of complex feedback loops should be explored, by which
HSP abundance might influence GH or IGF-I signals. Along these lines,
transgenic mice overexpressing Hsp70 exhibit a growth deficit and a 50%
reduction in serum IGF-I levels [33], Hsp60 augments IGF-I signals by
inhibiting degradation of the IGF-I receptor in cardiac tissue [34], and in
cartilage, Hsp90 appears to facilitate IGF-I-induced phosphorylation of AKT
[35].
What's
next? Can we "chaperone our way" to extended lifespan in mice?
Establishing
the contribution of HSPs to longevity in GH / IGF-I mutant mice, and whether
this contribution parallels that described in daf-2 worms, will shed
light on the more general issue of how HSPs might influence lifespan and
age-related disease in mammalian systems. Clearly, HSP overexpression has, in
many but not all cases, been successful as a pro-longevity manipulation in
invertebrate models, presumably due to enhanced proteostasis with age and/or
protection against oxidative stress damage [15]. It would, at present, be
valuable to obtain a comparable success story involving laboratory rodents,
which would establish that chaperones can be used as a pro-longevity
therapeutic in mammals. Systemic and lifelong HSP overexpression (or elevated
HSF-1 activity) seems unlikely to be a winning strategy, since there is now
considerable evidence that this can increase mortality in organisms for which
cancer figures prominently in the disease spectrum [33, 36 - 38]. Moreover, if
we are to learn from the two manipulations most reliably known to increase mouse
lifespan, loss of GH / IGF-I signals and dietary restriction, we'd walk away
the notion that, at a systemic level, decreased expression of certain
HSP-encoding genes (e.g., Hsph1) is associated with longevity more so
than increased HSP expression [28,39]. In consideration of this, it appears
that modification of existing thought paradigms will be required for exploring
the role of HSPs as longevity therapeutics, perhaps in combination with more
nuanced genetic or pharmacological approaches. In some mitotic tissues,
inhibition of HSF-1 activity or decreased HSP abundance may serve to combat
malignant transformation [37]. On the other hand, this may be deleterious in
tissues with post-mitotic cell populations, such as heart and the central
nervous system [40,41], where results generated from invertebrate models are
more likely to be applicable in direct fashion, such that manipulations
augmenting HSP activity might positively affect lifespan or certain disease
outcomes. A good exemplar of this approach is the study of Li and Ren [42], in
which cardiac-specific overexpression of IGF-I led to a small but significant
increase in mouse lifespan, even though the anti-apoptotic effects of this
manipulation would likely have limited organismic survival if it were applied
systemically or to other organ systems. Similar tissue-specific strategies may
be appropriate for evaluating whether enhanced HSP abundance is a viable
pro-longevity strategy in mice, and indeed, cardiac tissue may provide a
suitable domain for future investigations utilizing this line of attack [41, 43-46].
Acknowledgments
WRS
is supported by NIA training grant T32-AG00114 and the University of Michigan
departments of Pathology and Geriatrics.
Conflicts of Interest
The
author of this manuscript has no conflict of interests to declare.
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H1736
-H1744.
[PubMed]
.