Eat More, Weigh Less, Live
Longer Clever genetic detective work may have
found out the reason why a near starvation diet prolongs the life of many
animals. Ronald Kahn at Harvard Medical School in Boston, US,
and his colleagues have been able to extend the lifespan (寿命) of mice by 18 per
cent by blocking the rodent’s (啮齿动物) increase of fat in specific cells. This
suggests that thinness—and hot necessarily diet—promotes long life in "calorie
(热量卡) restricted" animals. "It’s very cool work." says aging
researcher Cynthia Kenyon of the University of California, San Francisco. "These
mice eat all they want, lose weight and live longer. It’s like
heaven." Calorie restriction dramatically extends the lifespan
of organisms as different as worms and rodents. Whether this works in humans is
still unknown, partly because few people are willing to submit to such a strict
diet. But many researchers hope they will be able to trigger
the same effect with a drug once they understand how less food leads to a longer
life. One theory is that eating less reduces the increase of harmful things that
can damage cells. But Kahn’s team wondered whether the animals simply benefit by
becoming thin. To find out, they used biology tricks to disrupt
the insulin (胰岛素) receptor (受体) gene in lab mice—but only in their fat cells.
"Since insulin is needed to help fat cells store fat, these animals were
protected against becoming fat," explains Kahn. This slight
genetic change in a single tissue had dramatic effects. By three months of age,
Kahn, those modified mice had up to 70 per cent less body fat than normal
control mice, despite the fact that they ate 55 per cent more food per gram of
body weight. In addition, their lifespan increased. The average control mouse
lived 753 days, while the thin rodents averaged a lifespan of 887 days. After
three years, all the control mice had died, but one-quarter of the modified
rodents were still alive. "That they get these effects by just
manipulating the fat cells is controversial," says Leonard Guarente of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who studies calorie restriction and
aging. But Guarente says Kahn has yet to prove that the same effect is
responsible for increased lifespan in calorie restricted animals. "It might be
the same effect or there might be two routes to long life," he points out, "and
that would be very interesting." Ronald Kahn and his colleagues can make mice live longer by ______.
A. offering them less food
B. giving them a balanced diet
C. disrupting the specific genes in their fat cells
D. preventing them growing larger