PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Mice fed rapamycin have an increase in lifespan associated with major changes in the liver transcriptome.

  • Wilson C Fok,
  • Yidong Chen,
  • Alex Bokov,
  • Yiqiang Zhang,
  • Adam B Salmon,
  • Vivian Diaz,
  • Martin Javors,
  • William H Wood,
  • Yongqing Zhang,
  • Kevin G Becker,
  • Viviana I Pérez,
  • Arlan Richardson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083988
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. e83988

Abstract

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Rapamycin was found to increase (11% to 16%) the lifespan of male and female C57BL/6J mice most likely by reducing the increase in the hazard for mortality (i.e., the rate of aging) term in the Gompertz mortality analysis. To identify the pathways that could be responsible for rapamycin's longevity effect, we analyzed the transcriptome of liver from 25-month-old male and female mice fed rapamycin starting at 4 months of age. Few changes (4,500) changed significantly in females. Using multidimensional scaling and heatmap analyses, the male mice fed rapamycin were found to segregate into two groups: one group that is almost identical to control males (Rapa-1) and a second group (Rapa-2) that shows a change in gene expression (>4,000 transcripts) with more than 60% of the genes shared with female mice fed Rapa. Using ingenuity pathway analysis, 13 pathways were significantly altered in both Rapa-2 males and rapamycin-fed females with mitochondrial function as the most significantly changed pathway. Our findings show that rapamycin has a major effect on the transcriptome and point to several pathways that would likely impact the longevity.