daf-2;sca-1

Lifespan changes: From wild type to daf-2;sca-1

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Genetic mutants with daf-2, sca-1 alterations

    Names of genes are ordered alphabetically. For the order of interventions, please see the specific paper.
  • Temperature °C

    25

  • Diet

    NGM

  • Lifespan (days)

    39.8

  • Lifespan change (compared to wild type)

    96.06%

  • Phenotype

    Life span was decreased by 20.2% in daf-2(e1370) upon RNAi of sca-1.

  • Lifespan comparisons

    Double mutant daf-2(e1370);sca-1(RNAi) has a lifespan of 39.8 days, while single mutant sca-1(RNAi) has a lifespan of 19.9 days, single mutant daf-2(e1370) has a lifespan of 49.9 days and wild type has a lifespan of 20.3 days.

  • Type of interaction
    See methods

    Opposite lifespan effects of single mutants

  • Citation
    View abstract

    Rogers AN et al., 2011, Life span extension via eIF4G inhibition is mediated by posttranscriptional remodeling of stress response gene expression in C. elegans. Cell Metab. 14(1):55-66 PubMed 21723504 Click here to select all mutants from this PubMed ID in the graph

Search genes: daf-2 sca-1
  • Entrez ID
  • Symbol
  • GenAge
  • Wormbase ID

Insulin-like receptor subunit beta;Receptor protein-tyrosine kinase;hypothetical protein


Locus: CELE_Y55D5A.5


Wormbase description: daf-2 encodes a receptor tyrosine kinase that is the C. elegans insulin/IGF receptor ortholog; DAF-2 activity is required for a number of processes in C. elegans, including embryonic and larval development, formation of the developmentally arrested dauer larval stage (diapause), larval developmental timing, adult longevity, reproduction, fat storage, salt chemotaxis learning, and stress resistance, including response to high temperature, oxidative stress, and bacterial infection; DAF-2 signals through a conserved PI 3-kinase pathway to negatively regulate the activity of DAF-16, a Forkhead-related transcription factor, by inducing its phosphorylation and nuclear exclusion; in addition, DAF-2 negatively regulates the nuclear localization, and hence transcriptional activity, of SKN-1 in intestinal nuclei; amongst the 38 predicted insulin-like molecules in C. elegans, genetic and microarray analyses suggest that at least DAF-28, INS-1, and INS-7 are likely DAF-2 ligands; genetic mosaic and tissue-specific promoter studies indicate that daf-2 can function cell nonautonomously and within multiple cell types to influence dauer formation and adult lifespan, likely by regulating the production of secondary endocrine signals that coordinate growth and longevity throughout the animal; temporal analysis of daf-2 function indicates that daf-2 regulates lifespan, reproduction, and diapause independently, at distinct times during the animal's life cycle.


  • Entrez ID
  • Symbol
  • GenAge
  • Wormbase ID

Calcium-transporting ATPase


Locus: CELE_K11D9.2


Wormbase description: The sca-1 gene encodes a sarco-endoplasmic reticulum Ca[2+] ATPase homolog that is required for development and muscle function; sca-1 is also a ortholog of human ATP2A1 (OMIM:108730), which when mutated leads to Darier-White disease (OMIM:124200).


Orthologs of daf-2;sca-1 in SynergyAge
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Species Gene
Orthologs of daf-2 in SynergyAge
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Species Gene
Drosophila melanogaster InR
Orthologs of sca-1 in SynergyAge
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Species Gene
About

SynergyAge database hosts high-quality, manually curated information about the synergistic and antagonistic lifespan effects of genetic interventions in model organisms, also allowing users to explore the longevity relationships between genes in a visual way.

Read more about SynergyAge database

How to cite us

If you would like to cite this database please use:

Bunu, G., Toren, D., Ion, C. et al. SynergyAge, a curated database for synergistic and antagonistic interactions of longevity-associated genes. Sci Data 7, 366 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-020-00710-z

Contact
Robi Tacutu, Ph.D.
Head: Systems Biology of Aging Group, Bioinformatics & Structural Biochemistry Department
Institute of Biochemistry, Ground floor
Splaiul Independentei 296, Bucharest, Romania
Email:

Group webpage: www.aging-research.group