|
Life span: does the limit to survival depend upon metabolic efficiency under stress? |
| Print |
|
|
|
Author: Parsons, P. A.
Year: 2002
Title: Life span: does the limit to survival depend
upon metabolic efficiency under stress?
Journal: Biogerontology
Volume: 3
Pages: 233-241
Abstract: Survival to old age in natural populations
is enhanced by high vitality and resilience which depends upon substantial
homeostasis and energetic amd metabolic efficiency underlain by genes for
stress resistance. Under this assumption increased longevity follows from
primary selection for stress resistance where stress targets energy carriers.
Furthermore old and young fitness should be correlated irrespective of age
under the stressful selection regime of natural populations. In contrast,
antagonistic pleiotropy is most likely under the less rigorous selection regime
of well-nourished humans and laboratory populations surviving to old age.
Similarly, hormesis for longevity, for example from a mild temperature stress
or restricted food intake is most likely under benign environmental conditions.
Assuming that aging in natural populations depends upon ecological circumstances,
large evolutionary increases in life span are unlikely under the stress theory
of aging since organisms are frequently close to their limits of survival where
metabolic efficiency is at a premium. Exceptions can occur in island
populations and for mutants under laboratory conditions since the risks from
environmental hazards are reduced, and life span becomes extended as a
consequence. In modern human populations, selection for stress resistance is
less intense than in earlier times which should be permissive of the
accumulation of stress-sensitive mutants under the mutation-accumulation theory
of aging. However, this process is ultimately likely to restrict the evolution
of life-span extensions in the future especially if abiotic conditions
deteriorate, when survival would depend more directly on metabolic efficiency
under stress.
|
|