Lifespan changes: From wild type to eat-2;ife-2
20
27.2
49.45%
We observed a similar additive effect on lifespan in long-lived, dietary restricted eat-2 (eating, abnormal pharyngeal pumping-2) mutants
Double mutant eat-2(ad465);ife-2(RNAi) has a lifespan of 27.2 days, while single mutant eat-2(ad465) has a lifespan of 24.3 days, single mutant ife-2(RNAi) has a lifespan of 22.4 days and wild type has a lifespan of 18.2 days.
Almost additive (positive)
Syntichaki P et al., 2007, eIF4E function in somatic cells modulates ageing in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nature. 445(7130):922-6 17277769 Click here to select all mutants from this PubMed ID in the graph
Neuronal acetylcholine receptor subunit eat-2
Locus: CELE_Y48B6A.4
Wormbase description: eat-2 encodes a ligand-gated ion channel subunit most closely related to the non-alpha-subunits of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR); EAT-2 functions postsynaptically in pharyngeal muscle to regulate the rate of pharyngeal pumping; eat-2 is also required for normal life span and defecation; a functional EAT-2::GFP fusion protein localizes to two small dots near the junction of pharyngeal muscles pm4 and pm5, which is the site of the posterior-most MC motor neuron processes and the MC synapse; eat-2 genetically interacts with eat-18, which encodes a predicted novel transmembrane protein expressed in pharyngeal muscle and required for proper function of pharyngeal nicotonic receptors.
Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E-2
Locus: CELE_R04A9.4
Wormbase description: ife-2 encodes a translation initiation factor 4F, cap-binding subunit (eIF-4E); by homology, IFE-2 is predicted to function in cap-dependent mRNA translation initiation; loss of ife-2 activity in adult animals extends lifespan.
Show in SynergyAge | |
---|---|
Species | Gene |
Show in SynergyAge | |
---|---|
Species | Gene |
Show in SynergyAge | |
---|---|
Species | Gene |
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.
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
Group webpage: www.aging-research.group