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July 21st, 2025
Version: 3
University of Oregon
genetics
biorxiv

Computer prediction and genetic analysis identifies retinoic acid modulation as a driver of conserved longevity pathways in genetically-diverse Caenorhabditis nematodes

Banse, S. A.Open in Google Scholar•Sedore, C. A.Open in Google Scholar•Coleman-Hulbert, A.Open in Google Scholar•Johnson, E.Open in Google Scholar•Onken, B.Open in Google Scholar•Hall, D.Open in Google Scholar•Segerdell, E.Open in Google Scholar•Jackson, E. G.Open in Google Scholar•Song, Y.Open in Google Scholar•Osman, H. C.Open in Google Scholaret al.

Aging is a pan-metazoan process with significant consequences for human health and society--discovery of new compounds that ameliorate the negative health impacts of aging promise to be of tremendous benefit across a number of age-based comorbidities. One method to prioritize a testable subset of the nearly infinite universe of potential compounds is to use computational prediction of their likely anti-aging capacity. Here we present a survey of longevity effects for 16 compounds suggested by a previously published computational prediction set, capitalizing upon the comprehensive, multi-species approach utilized by the Caenorhabditis Intervention Testing Program (CITP). While eleven compounds (aldosterone, arecoline, bortezomib, dasatinib, decitabine, dexamethasone, erlotinib, everolimus, gefitinib, temsirolimus, and thalidomide) either had no effect on median lifespan or were toxic, five compounds (all-trans retinoic acid, berberine, fisetin, propranolol, and ritonavir) extended lifespan in Caenorhabditis elegans. These computer predictions yield a remarkable positive hit rate of 30%. Deeper genetic characterization of the longevity effects of one of the most efficacious compounds, the endogenous signaling ligand all-trans retinoic acid (atRA, designated tretinoin in medical products), which is widely prescribed for treatment of acne, skin photoaging and acute promyelocytic leukemia, demonstrated a requirement for the regulatory kinases AKT-1 and AKT-2. While the canonical Akt-target FOXO/DAF-16 was largely dispensable, other conserved Akt-targets (Nrf2/SKN-1 and HSF1/HSF-1), as well as the conserved catalytic subunit of AMPK AAK-2, were all necessary for longevity extension by atRA. Evolutionary conservation of retinoic acid as a signaling ligand and the structure of the downstream effector network of retinoic acid combine to suggest that the all-trans retinoic acid pathway is an ancient metabolic regulatory system that can modulate lifespan. Our results highlight the potential of combining computational prediction of longevity interventions with the power of nematode functional genetics and underscore that the manipulation of a conserved metabolic regulatory circuit by co-opting endogenous signaling molecules is a powerful approach for discovering aging interventions.

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