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Hofer, SJ; Daskalaki, I; Abdellatif, M; Stelzl, U; Sedej, S; Tavernarakis, N; Kroemer, G; Madeo, F.
A surge in endogenous spermidine is essential for rapamycin-induced autophagy and longevity.
Autophagy. 2024;
Doi: 10.1080/15548627.2024.2396793
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- Co-authors Med Uni Graz
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Abdellatif Mahmoud
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Sedej Simon
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- Abstract:
- Acute nutrient deprivation (fasting) causes an immediate increase in spermidine biosynthesis in yeast, flies, mice and humans, as corroborated in four independent clinical studies. This fasting-induced surge in spermidine constitutes the critical first step of a phylogenetically conserved biochemical cascade that leads to spermidine-dependent hypusination of EIF5A (eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A), which favors the translation of the pro-macroautophagic/autophagic TFEB (transcription factor EB), and hence an increase in autophagic flux. We observed that genetic or pharmacological inhibition of the spermidine increase by inhibition of ODC1 (ornithine decarboxylase 1) prevents the pro-autophagic and antiaging effects of fasting in yeast, nematodes, flies and mice. Moreover, knockout or knockdown of the enzymes required for EIF5A hypusination abolish fasting-mediated autophagy enhancement and longevity extension in these organisms. Of note, autophagy and longevity induced by rapamycin obey the same rule, meaning that they are tied to an increase in spermidine synthesis. These findings indicate that spermidine is not only a "caloric restriction mimetic" in the sense that its supplementation mimics the beneficial effects of nutrient deprivation on organismal health but that it is also an obligatory downstream effector of the antiaging effects of fasting and rapamycin.
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Aging
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autophagy
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lifespan
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rapamycin
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spermidine
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