Aging
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Research Paper|Volume 8, Issue 10|pp 2568—2589

Empirical verification of evolutionary theories of aging

Pavlo Kyryakov1, Alejandra Gomez-Perez1, Anastasia Glebov1, Nimara Asbah1, Luigi Bruno1, Carolynne Meunier1, Tatiana Iouk1, Vladimir I. Titorenko1
  • 1Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6, Canada

* * Equal contribution

Received: August 31, 2016Accepted: October 11, 2016Published: October 25, 2016

Abstract

We recently selected 3 long-lived mutant strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae by a lasting exposure to exogenous lithocholic acid. Each mutant strain can maintain the extended chronological lifespan after numerous passages in medium without lithocholic acid. In this study, we used these long-lived yeast mutants for empirical verification of evolutionary theories of aging. We provide evidence that the dominant polygenic trait extending longevity of each of these mutants 1) does not affect such key features of early-life fitness as the exponential growth rate, efficacy of post-exponential growth and fecundity; and 2) enhances such features of early-life fitness as susceptibility to chronic exogenous stresses, and the resistance to apoptotic and liponecrotic forms of programmed cell death. These findings validate evolutionary theories of programmed aging. We also demonstrate that under laboratory conditions that imitate the process of natural selection within an ecosystem, each of these long-lived mutant strains is forced out of the ecosystem by the parental wild-type strain exhibiting shorter lifespan. We therefore concluded that yeast cells have evolved some mechanisms for limiting their lifespan upon reaching a certain chronological age. These mechanisms drive the evolution of yeast longevity towards maintaining a finite yeast chronological lifespan within ecosystems.