Aging -- Molecular aspects

Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
Oxidative stress is considered a major factor in the etiology of age related diseases and the aging process itself. Organisms have developed mechanisms to protect against oxidative damage resulting from increased production of reactive oxygen species during aging. One of the major antioxidant systems is the methionine sulfoxide reductase (Msr) enzyme family. The two major Msr enzymes, MsrA and MsrB, can stereospecifically reduce the S and R epimers, respectively, of methionine sulfoxide in proteins back to methionine. This study, using Drosophila melanogaster, decribes the first animal system lacking both MsrA and MsrB. The loss of either MsrA or MsrB had no effect on lifespan in Drosophila, but loss of MsrB results in a slight decrease in locomotor activity from middle age onward. Double mutants lacking both forms of Msr have a significantly decreased lifespan and decreased locomotor activity at all ages examined. The double Msr mutants had no detectable increase in protein oxidation or decrease in mitochondrial function and were not more sensitive to oxidative stress. These results suggested that other cellular antioxidant systems were protecting the flies against oxidative damage and the decreased life span observed in the double knockouts was not due to widespread oxidative damage. However, one cannot exclude limited oxidative damage to a specific locus or cell type. In this regard, it was observed that older animals, lacking both MsrA and MsrB, have significantly reduced levels of dopamine, suggesting there might be oxidative damage to the dopaminergic neurons. Preliminary results also suggest that the ratio of F to G actin is skewed towards G actin in all mutants. The present results could have relevance to the loss of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson’s disease.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
Aging is a biological process that has many detrimental effects due to the
accumulation of oxidative damage to key biomolecules due to the action of free
radicals. Methionine sulfoxide reductase (Msr) functions to repair oxidative
damage to methionine residues. Msr comes in two forms, MsrA and MsrB, each
form has been shown to reduce a specific enantiomer of bound and free oxidized
methionine. Effects of Msr have yet to be studied in the major developmental
stages of Drosophila melanogaster despite the enzymes elevated expression
during these stages. A developmental timeline was determined for MsrA mutant,
MsrB mutant, and double null mutants against a wild type control. Results show
that the Msr double mutant is delayed approximately 20 hours in the early/mid
third instar stage while each of the single mutants showed no significant difference to the wild type. Data suggests that the reasoning of this phenomenon
is due to an issue gaining mass.