Experimental Gerontology (Sep 2024)

The Citrus flavanone naringenin prolongs the lifespan in C. elegans and slows signs of brain aging in mice

  • Eugenia Piragine,
  • Martina De Felice,
  • Lorenzo Germelli,
  • Vanessa Brinkmann,
  • Lorenzo Flori,
  • Claudia Martini,
  • Vincenzo Calderone,
  • Natascia Ventura,
  • Eleonora Da Pozzo,
  • Lara Testai

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 194
p. 112495

Abstract

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Aging is one of the main risk factors for neurodegenerative disorders, which represent a global burden on healthcare systems. Therefore, identifying new strategies to slow the progression of brain aging is a compelling challenge. In this article, we first assessed the potential anti-aging effects of the Citrus flavanone naringenin (NAR), an activator of the enzyme sirtuin-1 (SIRT1), in a 3R-compliant and short-lived aging model (i.e., the nematode C. elegans). Then, we investigated the preventive effects of a 6-month treatment with NAR (100 mg/kg, orally) against brain aging and studied its mechanism of action in middle-aged mice. We demonstrated that NAR (100 μM) extends lifespan and improves healthspan in C. elegans. In the brain of middle-aged mice, NAR promotes the activity of metabolic enzymes (citrate synthase, cytochrome C oxidase) and increases the expression of the SIRT1 enzyme. Consistently, NAR up-regulates the expression of downstream antioxidant (Foxo3, Nrf2, Ho-1), anti-senescence (p16), and anti-inflammatory (Il-6, Il-18) markers. Our findings support NAR supplementation to slow the signs of brain aging.

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