Abstract

BackgroundLaboratory conditions nullify the extrinsic factors that determine the wild expected lifespan and release the intrinsic or potential lifespan. Thus, wild animals reared in a laboratory often show an increased lifespan, and consequently an increased senescence phase. Senescence is associated with a broad suite of physiological changes, including a decreased responsiveness of the circadian system. The time-keeping hormone melatonin, an important chemical player in this system, is suspected to have an anti-aging role. The Greater White-toothed shrew Crocidura russula is an ideal study model to address questions related to aging and associated changes in biological functions: its lifespan is short and is substantially increased in captivity; daily and seasonal rhythms, while very marked the first year of life, are dramatically altered during the senescence process which starts during the second year. Here we report on an investigation of the effects of melatonin administration on locomotor activity of aging shrews.Methodology/Principal Findings1) The diel fluctuations of melatonin levels in young, adult and aging shrews were quantified in the pineal gland and plasma. In both, a marked diel rhythm (low diurnal concentration; high nocturnal concentration) was present in young animals but then decreased in adults, and, as a result of a loss in the nocturnal production, was absent in old animals. 2) Daily locomotor activity rhythm was monitored in pre-senescent animals that had received either a subcutaneous melatonin implant, an empty implant or no implant at all. In non-implanted and sham-implanted shrews, the rhythm was well marked in adults. A marked degradation in both period and amplitude, however, started after the age of 14–16 months. This pattern was considerably delayed in melatonin-implanted shrews who maintained the daily rhythm for significantly longer.ConclusionsThis is the first long term study (>500 days observation of the same individuals) that investigates the effects of continuous melatonin delivery. As such, it sheds new light on the putative anti-aging role of melatonin by demonstrating that continuous melatonin administration delays the onset of senescence. In addition, the shrew appears to be a promising mammalian model for elucidating the precise relationships between melatonin and aging.

Highlights

  • Senescence is defined as the increase in the rate of mortality and the decrease of reproductive success as a function of age [1,2]

  • This pattern was considerably delayed in melatonin-implanted shrews who maintained the daily rhythm for significantly longer. This is the first long term study (.500 days observation of the same individuals) that investigates the effects of continuous melatonin delivery. It sheds new light on the putative anti-aging role of melatonin by demonstrating that continuous melatonin administration delays the onset of senescence

  • Little is known about the precise physiological mechanisms underlying normal age-related changes in biological timing, it has been suggested that they reflect changes in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the neural structure thought to be primarily responsible for generation of the circadian oscillation [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Senescence is defined as the increase in the rate of mortality and the decrease of reproductive success as a function of age [1,2] This phenomenon is the result of a complex combination of physiological changes that occur at the level of the whole organism as well as individual organs and tissues [3]. Studies aimed at understanding the specific effects of melatonin on agerelated deterioration of the circadian rhythm were based on shortterm acute melatonin administration [12,13,14] As a result, it remains unclear if the anti-aging effect of melatonin on the timekeeping system is due to its rhythmic production or to its production per se. We report on an investigation of the effects of melatonin administration on locomotor activity of aging shrews

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