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Dive into the research topics where Martin A. Javors is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin A. Javors.


Nature | 2009

Rapamycin fed late in life extends lifespan in genetically heterogeneous mice

David E. Harrison; Randy Strong; Zelton Dave Sharp; James F. Nelson; Clinton M. Astle; Kevin Flurkey; Nancy L. Nadon; J. Erby Wilkinson; Krystyna Frenkel; Christy S. Carter; Marco Pahor; Martin A. Javors; Elizabeth Fernandez; Richard A. Miller

Inhibition of the TOR signalling pathway by genetic or pharmacological intervention extends lifespan in invertebrates, including yeast, nematodes and fruitflies; however, whether inhibition of mTOR signalling can extend lifespan in a mammalian species was unknown. Here we report that rapamycin, an inhibitor of the mTOR pathway, extends median and maximal lifespan of both male and female mice when fed beginning at 600 days of age. On the basis of age at 90% mortality, rapamycin led to an increase of 14% for females and 9% for males. The effect was seen at three independent test sites in genetically heterogeneous mice, chosen to avoid genotype-specific effects on disease susceptibility. Disease patterns of rapamycin-treated mice did not differ from those of control mice. In a separate study, rapamycin fed to mice beginning at 270 days of age also increased survival in both males and females, based on an interim analysis conducted near the median survival point. Rapamycin may extend lifespan by postponing death from cancer, by retarding mechanisms of ageing, or both. To our knowledge, these are the first results to demonstrate a role for mTOR signalling in the regulation of mammalian lifespan, as well as pharmacological extension of lifespan in both genders. These findings have implications for further development of interventions targeting mTOR for the treatment and prevention of age-related diseases.


The Lancet | 2003

Oral topiramate for treatment of alcohol dependence: a randomised controlled trial

Bankole A. Johnson; Nassima Ait-Daoud; Charles L. Bowden; Carlo C. DiClemente; John D. Roache; Kevin Lawson; Martin A. Javors; Jennie Z. Ma

BACKGROUND Topiramate, a sulphamate fructopyranose derivative, might antagonise alcohols rewarding effects associated with abuse liability by inhibiting mesocorticolimbic dopamine release via the contemporaneous facilitation of gamma-amino-butyric acid activity and inhibition of glutamate function. We aimed to see whether topiramate was more effective than placebo as a treatment for alcohol dependence. METHODS We did a double-blind randomised controlled 12-week clinical trial comparing oral topiramate and placebo for treatment of 150 individuals with alcohol dependence. Of these 150 individuals, 75 were assigned to receive topiramate (escalating dose of 25-300 mg per day) and 75 had placebo as an adjunct to weekly standardised medication compliance management. Primary efficacy variables were: self-reported drinking (drinks per day, drinks per drinking day, percentage of heavy drinking days, percentage of days abstinent) and plasma gamma-glutamyl transferase, an objective index of alcohol consumption. The secondary efficacy variable was self-reported craving. FINDINGS At study end, participants on topiramate, compared with those on placebo, had 2.88 (95% CI -4.50 to -1.27) fewer drinks per day (p=0.0006), 3.10 (-4.88 to -1.31) fewer drinks per drinking day (p=0.0009), 27.6% fewer heavy drinking days (p=0.0003), 26.2% more days abstinent (p=0.0003), and a log plasma gamma-glutamyl transferase ratio of 0.07 (-0.11 to -0.02) less (p=0.0046). Topiramate-induced differences in craving were also significantly greater than those of placebo, of similar magnitude to the self-reported drinking changes, and highly correlated with them. INTERPRETATION Topiramate (up to 300 mg per day) is more efficacious than placebo as an adjunct to standardised medication compliance management in treatment of alcohol dependence.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2011

Rapamycin, But Not Resveratrol or Simvastatin, Extends Life Span of Genetically Heterogeneous Mice

Richard A. Miller; David E. Harrison; Clinton M. Astle; Joseph A. Baur; Angela R. Boyd; Rafael de Cabo; Elizabeth Fernandez; Kevin Flurkey; Martin A. Javors; James F. Nelson; Carlos J. Orihuela; Scott D. Pletcher; Zelton Dave Sharp; David A. Sinclair; Joseph W. Starnes; J. Erby Wilkinson; Nancy L. Nadon; Randy Strong

Rapamycin was administered in food to genetically heterogeneous mice from the age of 9 months and produced significant increases in life span, including maximum life span, at each of three test sites. Median survival was extended by an average of 10% in males and 18% in females. Rapamycin attenuated age-associated decline in spontaneous activity in males but not in females. Causes of death were similar in control and rapamycin-treated mice. Resveratrol (at 300 and 1200 ppm food) and simvastatin (12 and 120 ppm) did not have significant effects on survival in male or female mice. Further evaluation of rapamycins effects on mice is likely to help delineate the role of the mammalian target of rapamycin complexes in the regulation of aging rate and age-dependent diseases and may help to guide a search for drugs that retard some or all of the diseases of aging.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1999

Effects of Chronic Antidepressant Treatments on Serotonin Transporter Function, Density, and mRNA Level

Saloua Benmansour; Marco Cecchi; David A. Morilak; Greg A. Gerhardt; Martin A. Javors; Georgianna G. Gould; Alan Frazer

To investigate functional changes in the brain serotonin transporter (SERT) after chronic antidepressant treatment, several techniques were used to assess SERT activity, density, or its mRNA content. Rats were treated by osmotic minipump for 21 d with the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) paroxetine or sertraline, the selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor desipramine (DMI), or the monoamine oxidase inhibitor phenelzine. High-speedin vivo electrochemical recordings were used to assess the ability of the SSRI fluvoxamine to modulate the clearance of locally applied serotonin in the CA3 region of hippocampus in drug- or vehicle-treated rats. Fluvoxamine decreased the clearance of serotonin in rats treated with vehicle, DMI, or phenelzine but had no effect on the clearance of serotonin in SSRI-treated rats. SERT density in the CA3 region of the hippocampus of the same rats, assessed by quantitative autoradiography with tritiated cyanoimipramine ([3H]CN-IMI), was decreased by 80–90% in SSRI-treated rats but not in those treated with phenelzine or DMI. The serotonin content of the hippocampus was unaffected by paroxetine or sertraline treatment, ruling out neurotoxicity as a possible explanation for the SSRI-induced decrease in SERT binding and alteration in 5-HT clearance. Levels of mRNA for the SERT in the raphe nucleus were also unaltered by chronic paroxetine treatment. Based on these results, it appears that the SERT is downregulated by chronic administration of SSRIs but not other types of antidepressants; furthermore, the downregulation is not caused by decreases in SERT gene expression.


Neuroscience | 2002

Modulatory effects of norepinephrine in the lateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis on behavioral and neuroendocrine responses to acute stress.

Marco Cecchi; Habibeh Khoshbouei; Martin A. Javors; David A. Morilak

The brain noradrenergic system is activated by stress, and modulates the activity of forebrain regions involved in behavioral and neuroendocrine responses to stress, such as the lateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BSTL). This region of the limbic forebrain receives dense noradrenergic innervation, and has been implicated in both anxiety and regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. We hypothesized that stress-induced release of norepinephrine in the BSTL modulates anxiety-like behavioral responses to stress and activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal stress axis. Using microdialysis, we showed that release of norepinephrine was increased in the BSTL of male Sprague-Dawley rats during immobilization stress. In the next experiment, we then microinjected noradrenergic antagonists into the BSTL immediately prior to acute immobilization stress to examine noradrenergic modulation of behavioral stress reactivity. Either the alpha(1)-receptor antagonist benoxathian, or a cocktail of beta(1)- and beta(2)-receptor antagonists (betaxolol+ICI 118,551) blocked the anxiety-like reduction in open-arm exploration on the elevated plus-maze, but not the reduction in social behavior induced in the social interaction test. In a third experiment, benoxathian reduced plasma levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone following stress, but beta-receptor antagonists had no effect. From these results we suggest that stress-induced norepinephrine release acts on both alpha(1)- and beta-receptors in the BSTL to facilitate anxiety-like behavioral responses on the plus-maze but not the social interaction test, and modulates hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activation via alpha(1)-receptors only. Together with previous results in which adrenergic antagonists in central amygdala attenuated behavioral responses on the social interaction test but not the plus-maze, these observations suggest the two behavioral tests measure different dimensions of stress reactivity, and that norepinephrine facilitates different components of the stress response by region- and receptor-specific mechanisms.


Nature Cell Biology | 2015

MTOR regulates the pro-tumorigenic senescence-associated secretory phenotype by promoting IL1A translation

Remi Martin Laberge; Yu Sun; Arturo V. Orjalo; Christopher K. Patil; Adam Freund; Lili Zhou; Samuel C. Curran; Albert R. Davalos; Kathleen A. Wilson-Edell; Su Liu; Chandani Limbad; Marco Demaria; Patrick Li; Gene Hubbard; Yuji Ikeno; Martin A. Javors; Pierre Yves Desprez; Christopher C. Benz; Pankaj Kapahi; Peter S. Nelson; Judith Campisi

The TOR (target of rapamycin) kinase limits longevity by poorly understood mechanisms. Rapamycin suppresses the mammalian TORC1 complex, which regulates translation, and extends lifespan in diverse species, including mice. We show that rapamycin selectively blunts the pro-inflammatory phenotype of senescent cells. Cellular senescence suppresses cancer by preventing cell proliferation. However, as senescent cells accumulate with age, the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) can disrupt tissues and contribute to age-related pathologies, including cancer. MTOR inhibition suppressed the secretion of inflammatory cytokines by senescent cells. Rapamycin reduced IL6 and other cytokine mRNA levels, but selectively suppressed translation of the membrane-bound cytokine IL1A. Reduced IL1A diminished NF-κB transcriptional activity, which controls much of the SASP; exogenous IL1A restored IL6 secretion to rapamycin-treated cells. Importantly, rapamycin suppressed the ability of senescent fibroblasts to stimulate prostate tumour growth in mice. Thus, rapamycin might ameliorate age-related pathologies, including late-life cancer, by suppressing senescence-associated inflammation.


Aging Cell | 2014

Rapamycin-mediated lifespan increase in mice is dose and sex dependent and metabolically distinct from dietary restriction.

Richard A. Miller; David E. Harrison; Clinton M. Astle; Elizabeth Fernandez; Kevin Flurkey; Melissa Han; Martin A. Javors; Xinna Li; Nancy L. Nadon; James F. Nelson; Scott D. Pletcher; Adam B. Salmon; Zelton Dave Sharp; Sabrina Van Roekel; Lynn Winkleman; Randy Strong

Rapamycin, an inhibitor of mTOR kinase, increased median lifespan of genetically heterogeneous mice by 23% (males) to 26% (females) when tested at a dose threefold higher than that used in our previous studies; maximal longevity was also increased in both sexes. Rapamycin increased lifespan more in females than in males at each dose evaluated, perhaps reflecting sexual dimorphism in blood levels of this drug. Some of the endocrine and metabolic changes seen in diet‐restricted mice are not seen in mice exposed to rapamycin, and the pattern of expression of hepatic genes involved in xenobiotic metabolism is also quite distinct in rapamycin‐treated and diet‐restricted mice, suggesting that these two interventions for extending mouse lifespan differ in many respects.


Aging Cell | 2008

Nordihydroguaiaretic acid and aspirin increase lifespan of genetically heterogeneous male mice

Randy Strong; Richard A. Miller; Clinton M. Astle; Robert A. Floyd; Kevin Flurkey; Kenneth Hensley; Martin A. Javors; Christiaan Leeuwenburgh; James F. Nelson; Ennio Ongini; Nancy L. Nadon; Huber R. Warner; David E. Harrison

The National Institute on Agings Interventions Testing Program was established to evaluate agents that are purported to increase lifespan and delay the appearance of age‐related disease in genetically heterogeneous mice. Up to five compounds are added to the study each year and each compound is tested at three test sites (The Jackson Laboratory, University of Michigan, and University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio). Mice in the first cohort were exposed to one of four agents: aspirin, nitroflurbiprofen, 4‐OH‐α‐phenyl‐N‐tert‐butyl nitrone, or nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA). Sample size was sufficient to detect a 10% difference in lifespan in either sex, with 80% power, using data from two of the three sites. Pooling data from all three sites, a log‐rank test showed that both NDGA (p = 0.0006) and aspirin (p = 0.01) led to increased lifespan of male mice. Comparison of the proportion of live mice at the age of 90% mortality was used as a surrogate for measurement of maximum lifespan; neither NDGA (p = 0.12) nor aspirin (p = 0.16) had a significant effect in this test. Measures of blood levels of NDGA or aspirin and its salicylic acid metabolite suggest that the observed lack of effects of NDGA or aspirin on lifespan in females could be related to gender differences in drug disposition or metabolism. Further studies are warranted to find whether NDGA or aspirin, over a range of doses, might prove to postpone death and various age‐related outcomes reproducibly in mice.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2014

Rapamycin Extends Life and Health in C57BL/6 Mice

Yiqiang Zhang; Alex Bokov; John Gelfond; Vanessa Soto; Yuji Ikeno; Gene Hubbard; Vivian Diaz; Lauren B. Sloane; Keith Maslin; Stephen Treaster; Samantha Réndon; Holly Van Remmen; Walter F. Ward; Martin A. Javors; Arlan Richardson; Steven N. Austad; Kathleen E. Fischer

Target of rapamycin inhibition by rapamycin feeding has previously been shown to extend life in genetically heterogeneous mice. To examine whether it similarly affected mouse health, we fed encapsulated rapamycin or a control diet to C57BL/6Nia mice of both sexes starting at 19 months of age. We performed a range of health assessments 6 and 12 months later. Rapamycin feeding significantly reduced mTOR activity in most but not all tissues. It also reduced total and resting metabolic rate during the light (inactive) phase of the light:dark cycle in females only but had no effect on spontaneous activity or metabolism during the dark (active) phase of either sex. Males only had less fragmented sleep when fed rapamycin, whereas stride length and rotarod performance were improved in both sexes. Survival was also improved by this late-life rapamycin feeding, and some pathological lesions were delayed. We found no adverse health consequences associated with rapamycin treatment.


Aging Cell | 2014

Acarbose, 17-α-estradiol, and nordihydroguaiaretic acid extend mouse lifespan preferentially in males

David E. Harrison; Randy Strong; David B. Allison; Bruce N. Ames; Clinton M. Astle; Hani Atamna; Elizabeth Fernandez; Kevin Flurkey; Martin A. Javors; Nancy L. Nadon; James F. Nelson; Scott D. Pletcher; James W. Simpkins; Daniel Smith; J. Erby Wilkinson; Richard A. Miller

Four agents — acarbose (ACA), 17‐α‐estradiol (EST), nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA), and methylene blue (MB) — were evaluated for lifespan effects in genetically heterogeneous mice tested at three sites. Acarbose increased male median lifespan by 22% (P < 0.0001), but increased female median lifespan by only 5% (P = 0.01). This sexual dimorphism in ACA lifespan effect could not be explained by differences in effects on weight. Maximum lifespan (90th percentile) increased 11% (P < 0.001) in males and 9% (P = 0.001) in females. EST increased male median lifespan by 12% (P = 0.002), but did not lead to a significant effect on maximum lifespan. The benefits of EST were much stronger at one test site than at the other two and were not explained by effects on body weight. EST did not alter female lifespan. NDGA increased male median lifespan by 8–10% at three different doses, with P‐values ranging from 0.04 to 0.005. Females did not show a lifespan benefit from NDGA, even at a dose that produced blood levels similar to those in males, which did show a strong lifespan benefit. MB did not alter median lifespan of males or females, but did produce a small, statistically significant (6%, P = 0.004) increase in female maximum lifespan. These results provide new pharmacological models for exploring processes that regulate the timing of aging and late‐life diseases, and in particular for testing hypotheses about sexual dimorphism in aging and health.

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John D. Roache

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Randy Strong

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Thomas S. King

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Charles L. Bowden

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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James W. Maas

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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David E. Harrison

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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James F. Nelson

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Lance R. McMahon

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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