Protein carbonyl accumulation is an indicator of oxidative damage during aging. The relationship between oxidative stress and protein carbonylation during aging was studied by using a long (
age-1 ) and a short (
mev-1 ) life-span mutant of Caenorhabditis elegans . Protein carbonyl concentrations were similar young adults of both mutants and wild type; however, the subsequent age-dependent accumulation was different with the genotype. The
mev-1 mutant (with a 50 % SOD activity) accumulated protein carbonyl at a faster rate than did wild type, while the
age-1 mutant exhibited no obvious increase except a significant accumulation at the end of extended life span. Exposure to 70 % oxygen between age 4 and 11 days caused a far greater accumulation of carbonyl in
mev-1 than in wild type, but not in
age-1. In addition, rates of aging were enhanced by oxygen in a concentration-dependent fashion. The
age-1 was more resistant to, but
mev-1 was more sensitive to such oxygen enhancements of aging than was wild type. These results provide further evidence that oxidative damage is one of the major causal factors for aging in C. elegans , and that the
age-1 and
mev-1 genes govern resistance to oxidative stress.