Many mechanistic theories of ageing argue that a progressive failure of somatic maintenance, the use of energy and resources to prevent and repair damage to the cell, underpins ageing. To sustain somatic maintenance an organism must acquire dozens of essential nutrients from the diet, including essential amino acids (EAAs), which are physiologically limiting for many animals. In , adulthood deprivation of each individual EAA yields vastly different lifespan trajectories, and adulthood deprivation of one EAA, phenylalanine (Phe), has no associated lifespan cost; this is despite each EAA being strictly required for growth and reproduction. Moreover, survival under any EAA deprivation depends entirely on the conserved AA sensor GCN2, a component of the integrated stress response (ISR), suggesting that a novel ISR-mediated mechanism sustains lifelong somatic maintenance during EAA deprivation. Here we investigated this mechanism, finding that flies chronically deprived of dietary Phe continue to incorporate Phe into new proteins, and that challenging flies to increase the somatic requirement for Phe shortens lifespan under Phe deprivation. Further, we show that autophagy is required for full lifespan under Phe deprivation, and that activation of the ISR can partially rescue the shortened lifespan of -nulls under Phe deprivation. We therefore propose a mechanism by which GCN2, via the ISR, activates autophagy during EAA deprivation, breaking down a larvally-acquired store of EAAs to support somatic maintenance. These data refine our understanding of the strategies by which flies sustain lifelong somatic maintenance, which determines length of life in response to changes in the nutritional environment.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10680771 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.11.14.566972 | DOI Listing |
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