Scientists say a chemical signalling system plays a role in giving fruit flies a longer lifespan
Scientists in the United States have discovered that a chemical signalling system — an important anti-oxidant and cancer prevention pathway long recognized in people and other animals — also plays a role in giving fruit flies a longer lifespan.
The chemical signalling system is one of the ways that the body uses to defend itself from toxic assaults and threats like cigarette smoke, diesel exhaust, and dangerous microbes.When a gene called KEAP1 senses danger, it unleashes the NRF2 gene that triggers rampant anti-oxidant activity in a cell.
Professor Dirk Bohmann, a geneticist at the University of Rochester Medical Center, now says that a gene called CNC serves like NRF2 in Drosophila, and turns on cellular defences on a broad scale.
The CNC gene is widely known to be involved in determining the development of a fruit fly’s head.
“This is one of the main mechanisms the body uses to fight off the things that give you cancer,” said Bohmann, who studies fruit flies in an effort ultimately aimed at improving human health.
“This puts cells into an anti-oxidant defence mode. Drug development and testing is very, very expensive and time-consuming. This work should speed the development of new drugs aimed at preventing cancer,” he added.
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The researchers demonstrated the technology using a compound called oltipraz, which targets the pathway and has been tested in people as a cancer-prevention agent. The flies that ate food with the compound glowed more strongly, demonstrating that the NRF2 pathway was more active in them.
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Bohmann says that the presence of this system in fruit flies opens the door to faster, less expensive ways to find compounds that spur natural anti-oxidant activity.
“Turning on our natural anti-oxidants is big business for many companies trying to develop compounds to protect us from cancer and to slow the aging process. The same genetic principles govern many organisms, from flies to rodents to people, and we’re hopeful that our tool in fruit flies will speed this work for the benefit of patients,” said Bohmann.
This is the first time that the system, long known to be an important anti-oxidant and cancer prevention pathway, has also been shown to play a role in giving an organism a longer lifespan. The link gives new insight into the well-established connection between aging and cancer risk.
The study has been published in the journal Developmental Cell
Source-ANI
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