Abstract

Current ageing theories are far from satisfactory because of the many determinants involved in ageing. The well-known rate-of-living theory assumes that the product (lifetime energy expenditure, LEE) of maximum lifespan (MLS) and mass-specific basal metabolic rate (msBMR) is approximately constant. Although this theory provides a significant inverse correlation between msBMR and MLS as a whole for mammals, it remains problematic for two reasons. First, several interspecies studies within respective orders (typically within rodents) have shown no inverse relationships between msBMR and MLS. Second, LEE values widely vary in mammals and birds. Here, to solve these two problems, we introduced a new quantity designated as mitochondrial (mt) lifetime energy output, mtLEO = MLS × mtMR, in place of LEE, by using the mt metabolic rate (mtMR) per mitochondrion. Thereby, we found that mtLEO values were distributed more narrowly than LEE ones, and strongly correlated with the four amino-acid variables (AAVs) of Ser, Thr and Cys contents and hydrophobicity of mtDNA-encoded membrane proteins (these variables were related to the stability of these proteins). Consequently, only these two mt items, mtMR and the AAVs, solved the above-mentioned problems in the rate-of-living theory, and thus extensively improved the correlation with MLS compared with that given by LEE.

Highlights

  • Longevity is one of the most fundamental measures of the activity of life

  • When mass-specific basal metabolic rate (msBMR) used in the rate-of-living theory is proportional to the cell-specific metabolic rate, it depends on both Nmt and mt metabolic rate (mtMR)

  • We here report that only 2 mtMR can be strongly related to maximum lifespan (MLS) (§4.1)

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Summary

Introduction

Ageing theories have proposed a number of environmental, lifestyle and genetic factors as the determinants of longevity, including calorie restriction [1], telomere length [2], insulin signalling [3], mitochondrial (mt) DNA mutations [4,5] and fatty-acid composition of membranes [6]. These theories may interact with each other in a complex way [7], and remain far from perfect because there are many unresolved controversies as well as contradictory observations [8,9,10,11].

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