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Common features of aging fail to occur in Drosophila raised without a bacterial microbiome

Arvind Kumar Shukla, Kory R. Johnson, Edward Giniger

2021iScience36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lifespan is limited both by intrinsic decline in vigor with age and by accumulation of external insults. There exists a general picture of the deficits of aging, one that is reflected in a pattern of age-correlated changes in gene expression conserved across species. Here, however, by comparing gene expression profiling of Drosophila raised either conventionally, or free of bacteria, we show that ∼70% of these conserved, age-associated changes in gene expression fail to occur in germ-free flies. Among the processes that fail to show time-dependent change under germ-free conditions are two aging features that are observed across phylogeny, declining expression of stress response genes and increasing expression of innate immune genes. These comprise adaptive strategies the organism uses to respond to bacteria, rather than being inevitable components of age-dependent decline. Changes in other processes are independent of the microbiome and can serve as autonomous markers of aging of the individual.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGeneMicrobiomeGene expressionDrosophila (subgenus)OrganismGene expression profilingEvolutionary biologyGeneticsModel organismRegulation of gene expressionDevelopmental biologyInnate immune systemImmune systemGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model OrganismsInvertebrate Immune Response MechanismsInsect symbiosis and bacterial influences
Common features of aging fail to occur in Drosophila raised without a bacterial microbiome | Litcius