Management of stress appears to be intimately related to the regulation of animal lifespan. Notably, most known long-lived mutants tested so far are resistant to various forms of environmental stress. In particular, long-lived mutants of the
daf-2/insulin-like receptor (insulin/IGF-1 signaling) show increased resistance to heat and oxidative stress. We are using the correlation between longevity and stress resistance to identify genes that are involved in the process of lifespan regulation. We screened over 600 RNAis corresponding to kinases with wild type for enhanced survival under stress, and obtained 115 strong to weak candidates involved in heat and/ or oxidative stress resistance. These candidate RNAis are currently being tested in aging experiments. Up to now we identified eight kinases that enhance stress resistance and result in longevity when down regulated. For example, the down regulation of a glycogen synthase kinase, implicated to be involved in the hormonal control of several regulatory proteins, results in strong heat stress resistance and longevity. Other candidate RNAis have to be re-tested in lifespan experiments. In a similar approach we also screened the kinase RNAis for suppression of
daf-2. Using a long-lived and stress resistant
daf-2 mutant, we screened for reduced survival under heat and/or oxidative stress. 32 candidates were identified in the stress screens and analyzed in aging experiments. So far we identified 12 candidates that lengthen or reduce the lifespan of
daf-2. Four of these kinases specifically regulate
daf-2 and show no or minor effects on wild-type controls. Further characterization and assignment of the identified genes to pathways should yield insights into cellular processes involved in stress resistance and longevity.