{"title":"保护蛋白DX作为一种对抗小鼠虚弱的治疗策略","authors":"Lais Perazza, Adam Gower, Holly Brown-Borg, Paola Divieti Pajevic, LaDora Thompson","doi":"10.1152/physiol.2023.38.s1.5764188","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Frailty in aging is driven by the dysregulation of multiple biological pathways. Protectin DX (PDX) is a docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)-derived molecule that alleviates many chronic inflammatory disorders, but its potential effects on frailty remain unknown. Our goal is to identify age-related impairments in metabolic systems and to evaluate the therapeutic potential of PDX on frailty, physical performance, and health parameters. A set of 22-month-old C57BL/6 male and female mice were assigned to vehicle (Old) or PDX daily gavage treatment for 8 weeks, whereas 6-month-old (Adult) mice received only vehicle. Forelimb and hindlimb strength, endurance, voluntary wheel activity and walking speed determined physical performance and were combined with a frailty index score and body weight loss to determine frailty status. Our data shows that old vehicle-treated mice from both sexes had body weight loss paralleling visceromegaly, and old females also had impaired insulin clearance as compared to the Adult group. Aging was associated with physical performance decline together with higher odds of frailty development. There was also age-driven mesangial expansion and glomerular hypertrophy as well as bone mineral density loss. All of the in vivo and in vitro impairments observed with aging co-occurred with upregulation of inflammatory pathways and Myc signaling as well as downregulation of genes related to adipogenesis and oxidative phosphorylation in liver. PDX attenuated the age-driven physical performance (strength, exhaustion, walking speed) decline, promoted robustness, prevented bone losses and partially reversed changes in hepatic expression of Myc targets and metabolic genes. In conclusion, our data provides evidence of the beneficial therapeutic effect of PDX against features of frailty in mice. Further studies are warranted to investigate the mechanisms of action and the potential for human translation. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Funding: μCT analysis was performed by the Center for Skeletal Research Imaging and Biomechanical Testing Core at Massachusetts General Hospital (NIH P30 AR075042). We acknowledge the Boston University Microarray and Sequencing Resource Core Facility and the Clinical and Translational Science Institute (NIH UL1TR001430) for the RNA sequencing analysis. This work is supported, in part, by the Travis Roy Endowed Professorship (to L.V. Thompson) and the National Institute on Aging (R56 AG-067724 to L.V. Thompson and H. Brown-Borg, K07 AG-072124 to L.V. Thompson). This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2023 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.","PeriodicalId":49694,"journal":{"name":"Physiology","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":5.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Protectin DX as a therapeutic strategy against frailty in mice\",\"authors\":\"Lais Perazza, Adam Gower, Holly Brown-Borg, Paola Divieti Pajevic, LaDora Thompson\",\"doi\":\"10.1152/physiol.2023.38.s1.5764188\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Frailty in aging is driven by the dysregulation of multiple biological pathways. Protectin DX (PDX) is a docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)-derived molecule that alleviates many chronic inflammatory disorders, but its potential effects on frailty remain unknown. Our goal is to identify age-related impairments in metabolic systems and to evaluate the therapeutic potential of PDX on frailty, physical performance, and health parameters. A set of 22-month-old C57BL/6 male and female mice were assigned to vehicle (Old) or PDX daily gavage treatment for 8 weeks, whereas 6-month-old (Adult) mice received only vehicle. Forelimb and hindlimb strength, endurance, voluntary wheel activity and walking speed determined physical performance and were combined with a frailty index score and body weight loss to determine frailty status. Our data shows that old vehicle-treated mice from both sexes had body weight loss paralleling visceromegaly, and old females also had impaired insulin clearance as compared to the Adult group. Aging was associated with physical performance decline together with higher odds of frailty development. There was also age-driven mesangial expansion and glomerular hypertrophy as well as bone mineral density loss. All of the in vivo and in vitro impairments observed with aging co-occurred with upregulation of inflammatory pathways and Myc signaling as well as downregulation of genes related to adipogenesis and oxidative phosphorylation in liver. PDX attenuated the age-driven physical performance (strength, exhaustion, walking speed) decline, promoted robustness, prevented bone losses and partially reversed changes in hepatic expression of Myc targets and metabolic genes. In conclusion, our data provides evidence of the beneficial therapeutic effect of PDX against features of frailty in mice. Further studies are warranted to investigate the mechanisms of action and the potential for human translation. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Funding: μCT analysis was performed by the Center for Skeletal Research Imaging and Biomechanical Testing Core at Massachusetts General Hospital (NIH P30 AR075042). We acknowledge the Boston University Microarray and Sequencing Resource Core Facility and the Clinical and Translational Science Institute (NIH UL1TR001430) for the RNA sequencing analysis. This work is supported, in part, by the Travis Roy Endowed Professorship (to L.V. Thompson) and the National Institute on Aging (R56 AG-067724 to L.V. Thompson and H. Brown-Borg, K07 AG-072124 to L.V. Thompson). This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2023 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. 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Protectin DX as a therapeutic strategy against frailty in mice
Frailty in aging is driven by the dysregulation of multiple biological pathways. Protectin DX (PDX) is a docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)-derived molecule that alleviates many chronic inflammatory disorders, but its potential effects on frailty remain unknown. Our goal is to identify age-related impairments in metabolic systems and to evaluate the therapeutic potential of PDX on frailty, physical performance, and health parameters. A set of 22-month-old C57BL/6 male and female mice were assigned to vehicle (Old) or PDX daily gavage treatment for 8 weeks, whereas 6-month-old (Adult) mice received only vehicle. Forelimb and hindlimb strength, endurance, voluntary wheel activity and walking speed determined physical performance and were combined with a frailty index score and body weight loss to determine frailty status. Our data shows that old vehicle-treated mice from both sexes had body weight loss paralleling visceromegaly, and old females also had impaired insulin clearance as compared to the Adult group. Aging was associated with physical performance decline together with higher odds of frailty development. There was also age-driven mesangial expansion and glomerular hypertrophy as well as bone mineral density loss. All of the in vivo and in vitro impairments observed with aging co-occurred with upregulation of inflammatory pathways and Myc signaling as well as downregulation of genes related to adipogenesis and oxidative phosphorylation in liver. PDX attenuated the age-driven physical performance (strength, exhaustion, walking speed) decline, promoted robustness, prevented bone losses and partially reversed changes in hepatic expression of Myc targets and metabolic genes. In conclusion, our data provides evidence of the beneficial therapeutic effect of PDX against features of frailty in mice. Further studies are warranted to investigate the mechanisms of action and the potential for human translation. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Funding: μCT analysis was performed by the Center for Skeletal Research Imaging and Biomechanical Testing Core at Massachusetts General Hospital (NIH P30 AR075042). We acknowledge the Boston University Microarray and Sequencing Resource Core Facility and the Clinical and Translational Science Institute (NIH UL1TR001430) for the RNA sequencing analysis. This work is supported, in part, by the Travis Roy Endowed Professorship (to L.V. Thompson) and the National Institute on Aging (R56 AG-067724 to L.V. Thompson and H. Brown-Borg, K07 AG-072124 to L.V. Thompson). This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2023 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
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