The brain-body energy conservation model of aging.

Nat Aging

Department of Psychiatry, Division of Behavioral Medicine, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Aging brings about complex changes in energy metabolism, where damaged cells increase energy demands, but overall energy expenditure in the body stays stable or decreases.
  • - The brain plays a crucial role in managing energy resources; as tissues age and accumulate damage, the brain activates energy conservation responses to cope with lower energy availability.
  • - The proposed brain-body energy conservation (BEC) model of aging discusses the costs of cellular aging, the brain's perception of increased energy needs, and how external stressors or interventions can alter aging patterns.

Article Abstract

Aging involves seemingly paradoxical changes in energy metabolism. Molecular damage accumulation increases cellular energy expenditure, yet whole-body energy expenditure remains stable or decreases with age. We resolve this apparent contradiction by positioning the brain as the mediator and broker in the organismal energy economy. As somatic tissues accumulate damage over time, costly intracellular stress responses are activated, causing aging or senescent cells to secrete cytokines that convey increased cellular energy demand (hypermetabolism) to the brain. To conserve energy in the face of a shrinking energy budget, the brain deploys energy conservation responses, which suppress low-priority processes, producing fatigue, physical inactivity, blunted sensory capacities, immune alterations and endocrine 'deficits'. We term this cascade the brain-body energy conservation (BEC) model of aging. The BEC outlines (1) the energetic cost of cellular aging, (2) how brain perception of senescence-associated hypermetabolism may drive the phenotypic manifestations of aging and (3) energetic principles underlying the modifiability of aging trajectories by stressors and geroscience interventions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s43587-024-00716-xDOI Listing

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