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Publication : Wound healing and longevity: lessons from long-lived αMUPA mice.

First Author  Yanai H Year  2015
Journal  Aging (Albany NY) Volume  7
Issue  3 Pages  167-76
PubMed ID  25960543 Mgi Jnum  J:269839
Mgi Id  MGI:6274173 Doi  10.18632/aging.100726
Citation  Yanai H, et al. (2015) Wound healing and longevity: lessons from long-lived alphaMUPA mice. Aging (Albany NY) 7(3):167-76
abstractText  Does the longevity phenotype offer an advantage in wound healing (WH)? In an attempt to answer this question, we explored skin wound healing in the long-lived transgenic alphaMUPA mice, a unique model of genetically extended life span. These mice spontaneously eat less, preserve their body mass, are more resistant to spontaneous and induced tumorigenesis and live longer, thus greatly mimicking the effects of caloric restriction (CR). We found that alphaMUPA mice showed a much slower age-related decline in the rate of WH than their wild-type counterparts (FVB/N). After full closure of the wound, gene expression in the skin of old alphaMUPA mice returned close to basal levels. In contrast, old FVB/N mice still exhibited significant upregulation of genes associated with growth-promoting pathways, apoptosis and cell-cell/cell-extra cellular matrix interaction, indicating an ongoing tissue remodeling or an inability to properly shut down the repair process. It appears that the CR-like longevity phenotype is associated with more balanced and efficient WH mechanisms in old age, which could ensure a long-term survival advantage.
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