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    Home»Biology»Doubling Lifespan: Scientists Have Discovered a Key Cellular Mechanism That Could Control Longevity
    Biology

    Doubling Lifespan: Scientists Have Discovered a Key Cellular Mechanism That Could Control Longevity

    By University of California - MercedSeptember 5, 202413 Comments5 Mins Read
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    Cells Time Clock
    Researchers at UC Merced used fruit flies to uncover a cellular process that could impact cancer and aging by controlling protein production. Their discovery of how the protein OTUD6 regulates protein translation may provide insights into stress responses, longevity, and cancer cell growth. (Artist’s concept.) Credit: SciTechDaily.com

    UC Merced researchers have found that the protein OTUD6 can alter protein production in cells, potentially affecting lifespan and cancer, with future research aimed at exploiting this for therapeutic benefits.

    Researchers at UC Merced used fruit flies to uncover a cellular process shared by many organisms, which could significantly advance the understanding of cancer and aging.

    Department of Molecular and Cell Biology Professor Fred Wolf, then-graduate student Sammy Villa, and Genentech Vice President and Senior Fellow in Physiological Chemistry and Research Biology Vishva Dixit, discovered a mechanism that cells use to tune how much protein they make through the process of translating RNA into protein.

    “This mechanism may be responsible for changes in protein translation in stress, cancer, and aging,” Wolf said.

    Their work is detailed in the journal Nature Communications.

    Wolf and Dixit have a working relationship dating back to when Wolf was an undergraduate and a technician in Dixit’s research lab at the University of Michigan. They stayed in touch after Wolf went to graduate school at Berkeley and Dixit went to Genentech, a member of the Roche Group and a pioneer in biotech industry.

    “Vishva knew I was an expert in Drosophila (fruit fly) genetics, a resource that was not available at Genentech,” Wolf said. Normally, Wolf’s lab focuses on understanding the brain circuits and genes that control animal behavior, particularly how alcohol affects the brain and motivation is represented in it.

    Application of Drosophila in Research

    He and his researchers use Drosophila, a popular choice among researchers because they are inexpensive to work with, reproduce quickly and abundantly and it is easy to alter their genetics to test ideas. Research centered on the fruit fly has led to many sophisticated tools, Wolf said.

    But Dixit wanted to understand the function of the protein OTUD6.

    “He asked us to use the awesome power of the fly model to discover its function, and we took up the challenge,” Wolf said. “Vishva granted me seed funding to start generating flies with mutations in OTUD6 and testing the mutant flies for any problems they might have. The project really got going when the paper’s first author, Sammy Villa, joined my lab in 2018. Sammy took on the project and his skills in molecular biology and biochemistry were instrumental to the success of the project.”

    At first, the researchers had no idea what they were looking for. When they first made flies that were mutant for OTUD6, they expected to see something obvious such as the shape or number of wings or reproductive abnormalities. Instead, the flies appeared normal.

    “We stressed the flies in as many ways as we could conceive of and found they were susceptible to chemical stress, for example, oxidative stress,” Wolf said. “This allowed us to search for how OTUD6 contributed to resilience to stress.”

    Implications for Lifespan and Cancer Research

    The researchers looked for all proteins interacting with OTUD6 to discover what it does and found it reduced the ribosomes’ protein production by half. The modification lets cells produce more protein.

    “We were quite surprised by the huge impact OTUD6 had on how much protein was made in cells: Making flies mutant for OTUD6 cut protein production in half. That’s a big difference,” Wolf said. “The amount of protein produced in cells is known to affect how long animals live, with less protein being made correlating with longer lifespan. Our OTUD6 mutants lived twice as long. We think this is because there is less protein being made.”

    The amount of protein generated can also have a huge impact on some types of cancers.

    Some types of OTUD6 in humans are found in increased levels in many cancers, and many cancers have increased protein production. The researchers stressed that they have no direct evidence for a link, but increased OTUD6 might contribute to cancer cell growth and proliferation.

    Cells can change their amount of OTUD6 to change how much protein is made.

    “It has been known for years that there are two other ways for cells to actively tune how much protein is made, and we think we discovered a third way,” Wolf said.

    The team is interested in finding out how the cell changes the amount of OTUD6 present in cells, which could help understand how this new pathway is initiated and could lead to new ways of manipulating protein production to positively affect lifespan and possibly even cancer outcomes.

    Reference: “OTUD6 deubiquitination of RPS7/eS7 on the free 40 S ribosome regulates global protein translation and stress” by Sammy Villa, Pankaj Dwivedi, Aaron Stahl, Trent Hinkle, Christopher M. Rose, Donald S. Kirkpatrick, Seth M. Tomchik, Vishva M. Dixit and Fred W. Wolf, 11 August 2024, Nature Communications.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-51284-y

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    13 Comments

    1. Sydney Ross Singer on September 6, 2024 8:35 am

      Antibodies are proteins, too. Lowering protein production could reduce immune function. Also, the assumption that protein production lowers life span makes no sense.

      And this is in fruit flies. “At first, the researchers had no idea what they were looking for. When they first made flies that were mutant for OTUD6, they expected to see something obvious such as the shape or number of wings or reproductive abnormalities…The researchers stressed that they have no direct evidence for a link, but increased OTUD6 might contribute to cancer cell growth and proliferation.”

      Clearly, they are looking for more research grants to mess with fruit flies.

      Just say “cancer” and money flows. This is why so little progress is being made in cancer prevention.

      Reply
      • Torbjörn Larsson on September 8, 2024 8:07 am

        This is basic research and grants there has its uses without affecting specific cancer medicine grants.

        The caloric restriction hypothesis for aging is an interesting area of research, and this discovery ties into that since protein metabolism part of general metabolism. Some problems have been that “biological aging” has no accepted measure and that what is seen in many animals have not transferred well into apes.

        If regulating ribosomal productivity will dampen immune responses remains to be seen, e.g. immune cells reproduce so can potentially make up for deficiencies.

        Reply
    2. Mikael-Europe on September 7, 2024 1:48 am

      These scientists want more millions so they have job to play with fruit flies all day in the laboratory.

      Reply
      • Torbjörn Larsson on September 8, 2024 8:09 am

        And not only private grant organizations but public driven national ones want to give it to them as long as it is useful research.

        Reply
    3. Lol on September 7, 2024 5:03 am

      I’m pretty sure there are several cures for cancer but you’ll never see them. Big pharma will never let them come to light. Our environment is designed by those in power to make you sick so big pharma can manage your sickness. Your job st a number at the end of the day.

      Reply
      • Ric on September 7, 2024 10:23 am

        Can you make an experiment with me with this new proteine?

        Reply
        • Elaf's Creative Studio. My Channel name on September 7, 2024 10:54 am

          Eat seven Almonds every day and you can prevent cancer

          Reply
          • Glenn on September 7, 2024 12:10 pm

            Headline said double lifespan but nothing in the article says anything similar

            Reply
          • Eric Soesbe on September 7, 2024 1:40 pm

            Eight – not seven. Go for broke!

            Reply
      • Kimberly Charlene Reyer on September 7, 2024 7:16 pm

        Thank you for your very important news on Google. I appreciate you 🌹

        Reply
      • Torbjörn Larsson on September 8, 2024 8:10 am

        There is no evidence of “Big Pharma”, the term seems to serve as conspiracy theory spam fodder.

        Reply
    4. Sean Clarence Salipong on September 8, 2024 4:35 am

      Well it can improve people’s lifespan or longevity by extending their life.

      Reply
    5. Cyan on September 8, 2024 8:53 pm

      Yeah and in the 1700s there were ppl going around selling water and squeezed berries out of a bottle and calling it a wonder tonic to cure all of the world’s disease .. smh .. I pray they find a cure for cancer , but we can’t even cure the common cold .. so I’m told.
      Peace to all

      Reply
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