AI Article Synopsis

  • C. elegans serves as a model organism to study the mechanisms behind healthy aging, focusing on changes in the nervous system.
  • The aging nervous system shows two key types of morphological changes: increased outgrowths from specific neurons and a decline in synaptic integrity.
  • Maintenance of certain neuron structures in older worms is linked to lowered insulin signaling and the protective roles of specific transcription factors, while the preservation of locomotion appears to correlate with better synaptic health.

Article Abstract

Caenorhabditis elegans is a powerful model for analysis of the conserved mechanisms that modulate healthy aging. In the aging nematode nervous system, neuronal death and/or detectable loss of processes are not readily apparent, but because dendrite restructuring and loss of synaptic integrity are hypothesized to contribute to human brain decline and dysfunction, we combined fluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy (EM) to screen at high resolution for nervous system changes. We report two major components of morphological change in the aging C. elegans nervous system: (1) accumulation of novel outgrowths from specific neurons, and (2) physical decline in synaptic integrity. Novel outgrowth phenotypes, including branching from the main dendrite or new growth from somata, appear at a high frequency in some aging neurons, but not all. Mitochondria are often associated with age-associated branch sites. Lowered insulin signaling confers some maintenance of ALM and PLM neuron structural integrity into old age, and both DAF-16/FOXO and heat shock factor transcription factor HSF-1 exert neuroprotective functions. hsf-1 can act cell autonomously in this capacity. EM evaluation in synapse-rich regions reveals a striking decline in synaptic vesicle numbers and a diminution of presynaptic density size. Interestingly, old animals that maintain locomotory prowess exhibit less synaptic decline than same-age decrepit animals, suggesting that synaptic integrity correlates with locomotory healthspan. Our data reveal similarities between the aging C. elegans nervous system and mammalian brain, suggesting conserved neuronal responses to age. Dissection of neuronal aging mechanisms in C. elegans may thus influence the development of brain healthspan-extending therapies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3427745PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1494-11.2012DOI Listing

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