Abstract
ABSTRACTModerate dietary restriction often prolongs life in laboratory animals, and this response has been interpreted as an adaptive strategy that promotes survival during famine. However, dietary restriction can also increase frailty, and it therefore remains unclear whether restricted diets prolong life under stressful conditions like those experienced by wild animals. We manipulated adult dietary protein ofDrosophila melanogasteracross a gradient of ambient temperature. We found that protein restriction increased longevity of both sexes at benign ambient temperatures (25-27°C), but failed to extend or even reduced longevity of flies maintained in cold (21-23°C) or hot (29°C) conditions. Protein restriction also generally reduced reproductive performance, and did not consistently enhance performance of F1, F2 or F3 descendants. Our results challenge the long-held idea that extended longevity of diet-restricted laboratory animals represents an adaptive survival strategy in natural populations, and suggest instead that this response is an artefact of benign laboratory conditions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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