Goldsmith Content Providers: CDC/ C. Goldsmith, P. Feorino, E. L. Palmer, W. R. McManus [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons;The Cell Nucleus and Aging: Tantalizing Clues and Hopeful Promises. Scaffidi P, Gordon L, Misteli T. PLoS Biology Vol. 3/11/2005, e39
A recently published
study in the journal Biochimica et
Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease in 2018 demonstrated for
the first time that chronic treatment with the anti-diabetic drug metformin
activated human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) in human aortic
endothelial cells (HAECs) and significantly delayed endothelial senescence in
an AMPK-dependent manner [1]. AMPK is activated by the induction of cellular stress,
mediated by increases in intracellular calcium (Ca2+), reactive oxygen
species (ROS), and/or an AMP(ADP)/ATP ratio increase, etc. [41]. Telomeres are specialized regions of
repetitive nucleotide sequences located at the ends of eukaryotic chromosomes
that protect chromosomal ends from deterioration [2]. However, continuous cell division leads to
telomere shortening, impeding the replenishment of tissues and triggering
cellular senescence (i.e. cells cease to divide). Although human telomeres shorten with age,
telomeres may be lengthened by the enzyme telomerase, a ribonucleoprotein that
consists of the catalytic subunit hTERT, telomerase RNA, and the nucleolar
protein dyskerin [2,3]. hTERT, which is considering limiting for telomerase
activity, is a protein that exhibits reverse transcriptase activity and
synthesizes telomeric DNA from an RNA template [4].
The authors of the study initially demonstrated that both
metformin and the AMPK activator AICAR significantly increased hTERT levels and
enhanced AMPK activation in human
aortic endothelial cells (HAECs) [1].
Importantly, inhibition or knockdown of AMPK with compound C or siAMPKα
inhibited the metformin-induced increase in hTERT while metformin failed to
reverse siAMPKα-induced senescence in HAECs, indicating that hTERT expression
is regulated by AMPK activation in endothelial cells. Indeed, continuous culturing of HAECs in the
presence of metformin significantly increased hTERT protein levels and
activity, reduced the expression of the senescence markers p53, p21, p27, and
p16, and reduced senescence-associated
beta-galactosidase (SA-β-gal, a biomarker of
cellular senescence) staining in HAECs, again indicating that metformin delays
cellular senescence and increases hTERT levels via AMPK activation [1]. Strikingly, using ApoE-/- mice (which spontaneously
develop atherosclerosis and age faster compared to normal mice), the authors
also showed that chronic low-dose metformin administration for fourteen months
in drinking water enhanced the levels of activated AMPK and Pgc-1α observed in
the endothelial layer of the aorta [1].
Metformin also increased the transcript and protein levels of Tert,
decreased senescence markers (p16, p21, p27, p53) in the total aortic
homogenate, and significantly reduced SA-β-gal staining of aorta compared to
untreated ApoE-/- mice, demonstrating that metformin-induced AMPK activation
delays vascular aging and protects from age-associated atherosclerosis in
ApoE-/- mice [1].
Interestingly, telomere length has been shown to be
significantly reduced in cells derived from patients with the accelerated aging
disorder Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) and telomere shortening in
normal cells that occurs during cellular senescence activates progerin
production, a toxic protein that leads to an accelerating aging phenotype in
children with HGPS via aberrant alternative splicing of the LMNA gene [5]. Normal lamin A
plays a critical role in supporting nuclear architecture and morphology. Lamin A binding to subtelomeric repeats also
localizes telomeres to the nuclear periphery and loss of lamin A leads to
defects in telomeric heterochromatin, altered nuclear distribution and
shortening of telomeres, inefficient processing of dysfunctional telomeres by
non-homologus end joining, and increased genomic instability [6]. Telomere length has been found to be significantly
reduced in fibroblasts derived from HGPS patients and a recent study also
confirmed that in normal human fibroblasts, progressive telomere damage that
occurs during cellular senescence activates progerin production and also leads
to extensive changes in alternative splicing of many other genes, highlighting
a striking similarity between normal aging and accelerated aging in HGPS
patients [5,7]. Indeed, transfection of HGPS fibroblasts with human telomerase
(hTERT) mRNA restored cell proliferation, reduced cell loss, extended cellular
lifespan, increased telomerase activity and telomere length, and reduced SA-β-gal
staining compared to HGPS cells expressing catalytically inactive hTERT mRNA
[8]. Because metformin also increases
hTERT expression and inhibits senescence in human cells, it is likely that
cellular stress-induced AMPK activation, mediated by increases in intracellular
calcium (Ca2+), reactive oxygen species (ROS), and/or an AMP(ADP)/ATP ratio
increase, etc., represents a central node linking structurally diverse
compounds and methodologies that alleviate accelerated aging in HGPS cells.
As the splicing factor SRSF1 has been shown to increase
progerin production by promoting the use of a cryptic splice located in the
LMNA gene, metformin was recently shown to significantly reduce the expression
of SRSF1 and progerin, activate AMPK, and improve nuclear architecture in HGPS
cells, indicating that AMPK activation by metformin beneficially alters gene
splicing in HGPS cells by modulating SRSF1, a hypothesis that I first proposed
and published in 2014 [9-11]. Also, p32, a splicing-associated
protein that is an endogenous inhibitor of SRSF1 and is critical for the maintenance
of mitochondrial functionality and oxidative phosphorylation, has also been
shown to be essential for rapamycin- or starvation-induced autophagy mediated
by ULK1 [12,13]. Because rapamycin, also an AMPK
activator in vivo, improves accelerated aging defects in HGPS
cells by reducing progerin levels via induction of autophagy, AMPK activation
likely also beneficially modulates the activity of p32, leading to inhibition
of SRSF1 splicing activity and enhancement of mitochondrial functionality [14,15]. Moreover,
PGC-1α, which is activated by AMPK and metformin and promotes telomere
transcription, is downregulated in HGPS cells, leading to significant
mitochondrial dysfunction [1,16,17]. Methylene blue, which activates AMPK in vivo, was shown to increase PGC-1α
levels, induce progerin solubility, and alleviate accelerated aging defects in
HGPS cells [16,18]. Additionally, the
rapamycin analog temsirolimus alleviated accelerated aging defects in HGPS
cells but transiently increased ROS and superoxide anion levels in both HGPS
and normal cells within the first hour of treatment, again indicating that
cellular stress-induced AMPK activation represents a common mechanism for
inhibiting senescence and ameliorating symptoms associated with accelerated aging
[19].
The inhibition of SRSF1 and the promotion of hTERT
expression and telomere transcription by metformin via AMPK activation also
link HGPS and telomere integrity with HIV-1 latency. Increased splicing activity of SRSF1
inhibits reactivation of latent HIV-1 residing in infected immune cells,
preventing immune system detection and destruction of the virus [20]. Reactivation
of latent HIV-1 (i.e. the “shock and kill” approach) leads to a reduction in
SRSF1 but an increase in p32 activity and bryostatin-1 (a PKC modulator) has
been shown to reactivate latent HIV-1 via AMPK activation [20,21]. Interestingly,
p32 modulation via AMPK activation may also enhance and stabilize the splicing
activities of hnRNPA1, a heteroribonuclear protein that associates with p32,
antagonizes the splicing function of SRSF1, prevents splicing of the HIV-1
genome (promoting viral reactivation), and participates in the maintenance and
preservation of telomeres [22-25]. hnRNPA1 is also decreased in senescent
human fibroblasts and antagonizes cellular senescence and the
senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) via increasing SIRT1
expression [26,27]. Resveratrol, a
plant-derived polyphenol that activates AMPK, increases hnRNPA1 protein
expression and SIRT1, a histone deacetylase that
plays a role in a number of age related diseases and in the extension of
lifespan, is also activated by AMPK [28-30].
Also, T cell activation, an efficient method for reactivating latent
HIV-1, is dependent on increases in intracellular Ca2+ and ROS, telomerase is
transiently increased on T cell activation, and AMPK knockdown leads to T cell
death during in vitro activation [31-34]. Furthermore, resveratrol reactivates latent
HIV-1 and preliminary data demonstrated that metformin decreased the percentage
of CD4+ T cells expressing PD-1, TIGIT, and TIM-3, each markers associated with
T cells latently infected with HIV-1, in chronically-infected HIV-1 patients [35-37]. Such evidence strongly suggests that cellular
stress-induced AMPK activation, mediated by increases in intracellular calcium
(Ca2+), reactive oxygen species (ROS), and/or an AMP (ADP)/ATP ratio increase,
etc. links the alleviation of accelerated cellular aging defects in HGPS with
the potential eradication of HIV-1, a hypothesis that I first proposed in 2015
[38].
The evidence presented in the Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease
publication further substantiates that AMPK activation represents a central
node that connects the therapeutic benefits of chemically distinct compounds in
diseases as seemingly dissimilar as HGPS and HIV-1 latency. Indeed, AMPK
activators including metformin increase hTERT expression, promote telomere
transcription and integrity, decrease the splicing activity of SRSF1 that
increases progerin production but prevents latent HIV-1 reactivation, and
potentially beneficially modulates the activity of the SRSF1 inhibitor p32 and the
ribonucleoprotein hnRNPA1. As AMPK
activators (e.g. ionomycin) induce human oocyte activation (giving rise to
normal healthy children) and AMPK is localized throughout the entire acrosome
in human sperm (likely promoting the acrosome reaction), AMPK activation links
normal human aging, Progeria, and HIV-1 latency with the creation of all human
life (i.e. the “shock and live” approach) [11,38-40].
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