Uncoupled and surviving: individual mice with high metabolism have greater mitochondrial uncoupling and live longer
University of Aberdeen · MRC Human Nutrition Research · +1 more institution
Abstract
Two theories of how energy metabolism should be associated with longevity, both mediated via free-radical production, make completely contrary predictions. The 'rate of living-free-radical theory' (Pearl, 1928; Harman, 1956; Sohal, 2002) suggests a negative association, the 'uncoupling to survive' hypothesis (Brand, 2000) suggests the correlation should be positive. Existing empirical data on this issue is contradictory and extremely confused (Rubner, 1908; Yan & Sohal, 2000; Ragland & Sohal, 1975; Daan et al., 1996; Wolf & Schmid-Hempel, 1989]. We sought associations between longevity and individual variations in energy metabolism in a cohort of outbred mice. We found a positive association between metabolic…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Quartile
- Uncoupling protein
- Longevity
- Thermogenin
- Endocrinology
- Mitochondrion
- Internal medicine