Marks of Methuselah: Glowing regions show chemical marks on the genome of C. elegans identical to those in ancestors with life-span-increasing mutations—even though this descendant lacks the mutation.
Travis J. Maures

Biomedicine

Worm Offspring Inherit Longevity Even without the Genes

Worms given life-span-enhancing mutations produce offspring that lack the responsible genes but live longer anyway.

  • Thursday, October 20, 2011
  • By Sharon Begley

The tiny soil-dwelling worms C. elegans, when given mutations that make them live longer, transmit that trait even when their progeny don't inherit the life-extending mutations. The findings, published online today in Nature, present a modern-day version of Lamarckian inheritance, in which acquired characteristics can be passed to offspring without changes to the genetic code.

Although much more research remains to be done, the new study raises the tantalizing possibility that if Grandma practiced caloric restriction—which affects the expression of longevity-enhancing genes—her descendants might reap the benefits.

The inheritance occurs through "epigenetics": alterations not in the coding sequence of DNA (those ubiquitous A's, T's, C's, and G's) but in chemical changes that affect whether genes are expressed. One such change involves histones, proteins that act as spools for a cell's long strands of DNA. Some of the best-known longevity genes, those belonging to the Sir2 family, make proteins that alter histones.

Last year, Anne Brunet of Stanford and colleagues reported that another protein complex, called ASH-2, also alters histones in C. elegans, reconfiguring the histone-DNA complex into an "open" state that promotes gene expression. Deficiencies in ASH-2 extend the worm's life span by as much as 30 percent.

Advertisement

Brunet says this is likely because, without this protein, the DNA is in a closed configuration and less accessible to the cellular machinery that allows genes to be expressed. "Aging genes may not be as [highly] expressed, which may help prolong life span," she says.

In the new work, Brunet's graduate student, Eric Greer, blocked the three key proteins that make up the ASH-2 complex by mutating their genes. As expected, the worms lived longer—typically, an extra seven days beyond their lab life span of 20. Then Greer bred the mutated worms with normal worms until their descendants no longer had the mutations. Nevertheless, the progeny still lived longer, as did their own descendants: even though their genes for the key proteins were normal, an epigenetic memory of longevity persisted. As a result, their DNA was coiled up tight, and their suspected aging genes were sidelined.

Print

Related Articles

Anti-Aging Uncertainties Persist

New research raises further questions about the role of sirtuins in aging.

The Argument over Aging

Can a drug extend good health and postpone the effects of aging?

A Comeback for Lamarckian Evolution?

Two new studies show that the effects of a mother's early environment can be passed on to the next generation.

powered by
Advertisement

MAGAZINE

Foundation Medicine: Personalizing Cancer Drugs

Foundation Medicine is offering a test that helps oncologists choose drugs targeted to the genetic profile of a patient's tumor cells. Has personalized cancer treatment finally arrived?

Videos

The Virtual Nurse Will See You Now

More

Advertisement

Technology Review Lists

TR50

Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:

Wildcat Discovery

Qualcomm

Complete Genomics

Taiwan Semiconductor

More

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement