Repository: Freie Universität Berlin, Math Department

eIF5A hypusination, boosted by dietary spermidine, protects from premature brain aging and mitochondrial dysfunction

Liang, YongTian and Piao, Chengji and B. Beuschel, Christine and Toppe, David and Kollipara, Laxmikanth and Bogdanow, Boris and Maglione, Marta and Lützkendorf, Janine and See, Jason Chun Kit and Huang, Sheng and Conrad, T. O. F. and Kintscher, Ulrich and Madeo, Frank and Liu, Fan and Sickmann, Albert and Sigrist, Stephan J. (2021) eIF5A hypusination, boosted by dietary spermidine, protects from premature brain aging and mitochondrial dysfunction. Cell Reports, 35 (2). ISSN 2211-1247

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Official URL: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/...

Abstract

Summary Mitochondrial function declines during brain aging and is suspected to play a key role in age-induced cognitive decline and neurodegeneration. Supplementing levels of spermidine, a body-endogenous metabolite, has been shown to promote mitochondrial respiration and delay aspects of brain aging. Spermidine serves as the amino-butyl group donor for the synthesis of hypusine (Nε-[4-amino-2-hydroxybutyl]-lysine) at a specific lysine residue of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A (eIF5A). Here, we show that in the Drosophila brain, hypusinated eIF5A levels decline with age but can be boosted by dietary spermidine. Several genetic regimes of attenuating eIF5A hypusination all similarly affect brain mitochondrial respiration resembling age-typical mitochondrial decay and also provoke a premature aging of locomotion and memory formation in adult Drosophilae. eIF5A hypusination, conserved through all eukaryotes as an obviously critical effector of spermidine, might thus be an important diagnostic and therapeutic avenue in aspects of brain aging provoked by mitochondrial decline.

Item Type:Article
Subjects:Biological Sciences > Biology > Applied Biology
Biological Sciences > Biology > Cell Biology
Biological Sciences > Biology > Developmental/Reproductive Biology > Developmental Biology
Mathematical and Computer Sciences > Statistics > Applied Statistics
Divisions:Department of Mathematics and Computer Science > Institute of Mathematics
Department of Mathematics and Computer Science > Institute of Mathematics > Comp. Proteomics Group
ID Code:2552
Deposited By: Admin Administrator
Deposited On:19 Apr 2021 06:48
Last Modified:19 Apr 2021 06:48

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