Abstract
AbstractAging is a multifaceted process of accumulation of damages and waste in cells and tissues; age-related changes in mitochondria and in respiratory metabolism have been in the focus of aging research for decades. Here we investigated age-related changes in respiration rates, lactate/pyruvate ratio, a commonly used proxy for NAD+/NADH balance, and mitochondrial membrane potential in 4 genotypes of an emerging model organism for aging research, a cyclic parthenogen Daphnia magna. We show that total body weight-adjusted respiration rate decreases with age, although this decrease is small in magnitude and not observed in anaesthetized animals, thus likely to be accounted for by decrease in locomotion and feeding activity. Lactate/pyruvate ratio and mitochondrial membrane potential (Ψmt) showed no age-related changes, with a possible exception of Ψmt measured in the optical lobe and in epipodites (excretory organs) in which Ψmt showed a maximum at middle age. We conclude that actuarial senescence in Daphnia is not caused by a decline in respiratory metabolism and discuss possible mechanisms of maintaining mitochondrial healthspan throughout the lifespan.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory