Heliyon (Aug 2024)

Distinct, common and synergistic effects of insulin and IGF-1 receptors on healthy murine ageing

  • Andrew MN Walker,
  • Nicole T. Watt,
  • Nadira Y. Yuldasheva,
  • Sanjush Dalmia,
  • Marcella Conning-Rowland,
  • Chew W. Cheng,
  • Nele Warmke,
  • Katherine Bridge,
  • Oliver I. Brown,
  • Cheukyau Luk,
  • Michael Drozd,
  • Natalie J. Haywood,
  • Anna Skromna,
  • Natasha Makava,
  • Stephen B. Wheatcroft,
  • Mark T. Kearney,
  • Richard M. Cubbon

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 16
p. e36457

Abstract

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Objective: Reduced IGF-1 signalling is an evolutionarily conserved mediator of longevity, yet the magnitude of this effect is substantially larger in organisms retaining a common insulin and IGF-1 receptor. Whether this reflects the failure to simultaneously reduce IGF-1 and insulin signalling in mammalian model systems remains unexplored, as is the associated impact on markers of healthy ageing. We set out to address these uncertainties. Methods: We compared the duration of healthy life (healthspan) in male mice with haploinsufficiency of the insulin receptor (IRKO), IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1RKO), or both (DKO), versus wildtype (WT) littermates. Cognitive performance was defined using nesting studies at 3- and 24-months of age. Brain transcriptome was characterised at 3- and 18-months of age using RNA-seq. Results: Healthspan was longer in DKO versus WT, with IRKO and IGF-1RKO being intermediate. At 2 years of age, DKO also exhibited preserved nesting behaviour in contrast with all other genotypes. Differential insulin sensitivity or weight gain during ageing did not explain the preserved healthspan of DKO, since these were comparable to IRKO littermates. Brain transcriptomics at 18 months of age revealed lower expression of canonical ageing-associated genes in DKO versus WT, although many of these findings were replicated in IRKO versus WT or IGF-1RKO vs WT. Conclusions: Reduced insulin and IGF-1 receptor expression have both common and synergistic effects upon elements of healthy mammalian ageing, suggesting future ageing studies should consider targeting both insulin and IGF-1 signalling.

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