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Cell biology

IGF-1 signaling

DEIGF-1-Signalweg

IGF-1 signaling is the cascade that fires when insulin-like growth factor 1 binds its receptor in your cells. It switches on two parallel branches, PI3K/AKT and MAPK/ERK. Together, they promote cell growth, proliferation, and protein synthesis, while suppressing FOXO-driven stress resistance. IGF-1 can also bind insulin/IGF-1R hybrid receptors, at lower affinity. Turning this signaling down extends lifespan in worms, flies, and mice. And lower circulating IGF-1 shows up in some long-lived human groups. The trade-off, between the benefits of growth and repair and the costs to longevity, is still actively debated.

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Sources

  1. Kenyon C, Chang J, Gensch E, Rudner A, Tabtiang R. (1993). A C. elegans mutant that lives twice as long as wild type. *Nature*doi:10.1038/366461a0
  2. Kenyon CJ. (2011). The first long-lived mutants: discovery of the insulin/IGF-1 pathway for ageing. *Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B*doi:10.1098/rstb.2010.0276