eLife (Aug 2016)

Transient rapamycin treatment can increase lifespan and healthspan in middle-aged mice

  • Alessandro Bitto,
  • Takashi K Ito,
  • Victor V Pineda,
  • Nicolas J LeTexier,
  • Heather Z Huang,
  • Elissa Sutlief,
  • Herman Tung,
  • Nicholas Vizzini,
  • Belle Chen,
  • Kaleb Smith,
  • Daniel Meza,
  • Masanao Yajima,
  • Richard P Beyer,
  • Kathleen F Kerr,
  • Daniel J Davis,
  • Catherine H Gillespie,
  • Jessica M Snyder,
  • Piper M Treuting,
  • Matt Kaeberlein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.16351
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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The FDA approved drug rapamycin increases lifespan in rodents and delays age-related dysfunction in rodents and humans. Nevertheless, important questions remain regarding the optimal dose, duration, and mechanisms of action in the context of healthy aging. Here we show that 3 months of rapamycin treatment is sufficient to increase life expectancy by up to 60% and improve measures of healthspan in middle-aged mice. This transient treatment is also associated with a remodeling of the microbiome, including dramatically increased prevalence of segmented filamentous bacteria in the small intestine. We also define a dose in female mice that does not extend lifespan, but is associated with a striking shift in cancer prevalence toward aggressive hematopoietic cancers and away from non-hematopoietic malignancies. These data suggest that a short-term rapamycin treatment late in life has persistent effects that can robustly delay aging, influence cancer prevalence, and modulate the microbiome.

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