Abstract

Aging animals display a broad range of progressive degenerative changes, and one of the most fascinating is the decline of female reproductive function. In the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans, hermaphrodites reach a peak of progeny production on day 2 of adulthood and then display a rapid decline; progeny production typically ends by day 8 of adulthood. Since animals typically survive until day 15 of adulthood, there is a substantial post reproductive lifespan. Here we review the molecular and cellular changes that occur during reproductive aging, including reductions in stem cell number and activity, slowing meiotic progression, diminished Notch signaling, and deterioration of germ line and oocyte morphology. Several interventions have been identified that delay reproductive aging, including mutations, drugs and environmental factors such as temperature. The detailed description of reproductive aging coupled with interventions that delay this process have made C. elegans a leading model system to understand the mechanisms that drive reproductive aging. While reproductive aging has dramatic consequences for individual fertility, it also has consequences for the ecology of the population. Population dynamics are driven by birth and death, and reproductive aging is one important factor that influences birth rate. A variety of theories have been advanced to explain why reproductive aging occurs and how it has been sculpted during evolution. Here we summarize these theories and discuss the utility of C. elegans for testing mechanistic and evolutionary models of reproductive aging.

Highlights

  • Aging can be defined as the progressive decline of tissue morphology and function with increasing chronological age that eventually results in death of the organism

  • We focus on reproductive aging of the C. elegans hermaphrodite

  • Kocsisova et al (2019) reported an age-related increase in the time necessary to complete the cell cycle, increasing to ∼12 h in day 3 and 5 adult mated hermaphrodites (Figures 6A,B). This increase in cell cycle duration was measured on adult day 3, about 2 days before there is a substantial decline in progeny production, indicating that declines in the distal germ line may be the first changes during reproductive aging

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Summary

Introduction

Aging can be defined as the progressive decline of tissue morphology and function with increasing chronological age that eventually results in death of the organism. Mated wild-type hermaphrodites with an extended reproductive span display an increase of 70% in the frequency of matricidal hatching compared to self-fertile hermaphrodites that cease progeny production several days earlier due to sperm depletion (Figures 4D,E; Pickett and Kornfeld, 2013).

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