Longer lifespan in the Rpd3 and Loco signaling results from the reduced catabolism in young age with noncoding RNA

Downregulation of Rpd3 (histone deacetylase) or Loco (regulator of G-protein signaling protein) extends Drosophila lifespan with higher stress resistance. We found rpd3-downregulated long-lived flies genetically interact with loco-upregulated short-lived flies in stress resistance and lifespan. Gene expression profiles between those flies revealed that they regulate common target genes in metabolic enzymes and signaling pathways, showing an opposite expression pattern in their contrasting lifespans. Functional analyses of more significantly changed genes indicated that the activities of catabolic enzymes and uptake/storage proteins are reduced in long-lived flies with Rpd3 downregulation. This reduced catabolism exhibited from a young age is considered to be necessary for the resultant longer lifespan of the Rpd3- and Loco-downregulated old flies, which mimics the dietary restriction (DR) effect that extends lifespan in the several species. Inversely, those catabolic activities that break down carbohydrates, lipids, and peptides were high in the short lifespan of Loco-upregulated flies. Long noncoding gene, dntRL (CR45923), was also found as a putative target modulated by Rpd3 and Loco for the longevity. Interestingly, this dntRL could affect stress resistance and lifespan, suggesting that the dntRL lncRNA may be involved in the metabolic mechanism of Rpd3 and Loco signaling.


INTRODUCTION
Rpd3, a Drosophila histone deacetylase (HDAC), modulates chromatin structures and affects signaling pathways by interacting with several chromatin remodeling complexes [1][2][3]. The Rpd3 protein is known to mediate epigenetic effects like long-term memory and lifespan. The adult brain-specific changes of Rpd3 expression results in impaired long-term courtship memory [4]. However, systemic downregulation of Rpd3 extends lifespan [5,6], which is also observed in yeast with reduced Rpd3 expression [7]. Recently, it has been reported that Rpd3 interacts partially with the insulin signaling longevity pathway [8]. As several long-lived mutant flies display increased resistance to numerous stressors including oxidation, starvation, and heat compared to wild-type flies [9][10][11][12], Rpd3 downregulation also enhances stress resistance with extended lifespan [6]. Inhibition of mammalian HDACs is shown to be a proven anticancer therapeutic and potential treatment of many other diseases including HIV infection, Alzheimer's disease, and cardiac remodeling [13,14]. Consistently, it was recently reported that decreased Rpd3 expression in Drosophila heart tissue enhances cardiac function (decreased heart failure and accelerated heart recovery) and resistance against stressors [6].
Loco, a fly regulator of G-protein signaling (RGS) protein, has been identified as an activator or repressor with GTPase-activating protein (GAP) activity in the Gprotein signaling pathway [15,16]. The Loco protein functions in neuroblast (NB) asymmetric division [17] and blood-brain barrier formation [18], which are mediated by interactions with several GPCRs and the inhibitory G proteins (Gαi and Gαo). Beyond these AGING specific cellular functions, it is reported that Loco globally regulates stress resistance and lifespan [19]. Reduced Loco expression results in longer lifespan for flies with stronger resistance to the stressors, higher manganese-containing superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) activity, and higher fat content [19]. In contrast, upregulation of the loco gene shortens lifespan significantly with lower stress resistance and reduced fat content [19], also showing that its RGS domain containing GAP activity is related to the regulation of longevity [19]. Notably, the expressional changes of yeast RGS2 and rat RGS14, homologues of the fly Loco, also affect oxidative stress resistance and lifespan in the respective species [19], indicating that the Loco/RGS14 signaling pathway is evolutionarily conserved in various organisms for the regulation of longevity.
To investigate whether the nuclear protein Rpd3 interacts with the cytoplasmic membrane-associated protein Loco for the longevity regulation, here, we measured stress resistance and lifespan with a combination of the rpd3 downregulation to extend lifespan [5,6] and the loco upregulation to shorten lifespan [19]. Then, we examined gene expression profiles between those flies in order to find the common target genes modulated by Rpd3 and Loco for the longevity.

Rpd3 and Loco are related to regulate stress resistance and lifespan
When the rpd3 heterozygous (P{PZ}HDAC1 04556 /+) mutant flies [5] were incubated with paraquat-induced oxidative stress, this rpd3 downregulation (Rpd3-Down: rpd3 -UAS-loco/+) enhanced stress resistance up to 30% from the control (UAS-loco/+) flies ( Figure 1A-B) [6]. Using an UAS/Gal4 system [20], next we upregulated the genomic loco gene containing an UAS region in the promoter (P{XP}loco d06164 ) with an act-Gal4 driver that expresses a target UAS-gene in the whole body. In contrast to the higher stress resistance shown with the rpd3 downregulation ( Figure 1A-B), the loco upregulation (Loco-Up: UAS-loco/actG4) reduced survivorship by 33% under oxidative stress compared to the common control (UAS-loco/+ in Figure 1A-B) [19]. When rpd3 downregulation and loco upregulation were combined (Rpd3-Down+Loco-Up: rpd3 -UASloco/actG4), interestingly, the oxidative stress resistance showed an intermediate level (-11% in Figure 1A-B), which suggests that there is an interaction between the Rpd3 and Loco phenotypes in the stress resistance. The lifespans of Rpd3-Down, Loco-Up, and Rpd3-Down+Loco-Up flies ( Figure 1C-D) also exhibited a similar pattern as shown in assessing stress resistance ( Figure 1A-B), implying that the Rpd3 and Loco probably regulate longevity with common downstream genes or pathways.
To find the target genes that both Loco and Rpd3 modulate for stress resistance and lifespan, we examined gene expression profiles of the rpd3 downregulation (Rpd3-Down: rpd3 -UAS-loco/+) or the loco upregulation (Loco-Up: UAS-loco/actG4) versus the common control (UAS-loco/+) flies, independently ( Figure 1E). We focused on the "C" group ( Figure 1E) showing an opposite pattern in the expression level between the Rpd3-Down (longer lifespan) and Loco-Up (shorter lifespan) groups because the "C" genes would be changed in two different longevity phenotypes ( Figure 1A-D).

Longer lifespan enhanced by changes in Rpd3 and Loco exhibits the reduced catabolism
With a total of 49,162,435 reads of RNA-seq experiments, RNA expression levels of the 13,244 genes were compared between 2-day-old male flies of experimental and control groups (Rpd3-Down/ or Loco-Up/common control). First, we statistically filtered out the genes that are non-specifically changed in the expression with a p-value < 0.05 (Fisher's exact test). Then, with a cut-off value of ± 1.3-fold changes, we selected the candidates as significantly changed genes ( Figure 2A). In the rpd3-downregulated flies (Rpd3-Down), 647 genes showed decreased expressions and 633 gene expressions were increased with the loco upregulation (Loco-Up) ( Figure 2A). From these two gene groups, only 29 genes were overlapped reflecting the opposite expression between the longer lifespan (Rpd3-Down) and shorter lifespan (Loco-Up) ( Figure  2A). This indicates that the 29 expressions decrease in the long-lived flies with Rpd3 downregulation and conversely increase in the short lifespan of Locoupregulated flies. Reverse analysis ( Figure 2A) revealed that 10 genes show an expression pattern of an increase in the longer lifespan and a decrease in the shorter lifespan. Collectively, these 39 total genes (~ 0.3% from 13,244 genes initially screened) were considered as candidate target genes ( Figure 2A) which both Loco and Rpd3 modulate for stress resistance and lifespan ( Figure  1).
When the gene ontology of these 39 genes was analyzed with a DAVID web tool ( Figure 2B), 69% of them were shown to be related to the signaling pathways. Interestingly, many of them are metabolic enzymes, suggesting that Loco and Rpd3 change the metabolism for the longevity. Through RT-PCR analysis ( Figure  2C), we confirmed expression changes of candidate genes obtained from the RNA-seq experiments ( Figure  AGING 2A). As representatives of each functional subgroup in Figure 2D, they showed opposite expressions in the longer lifespan (Rpd3-Down) and shorter lifespan (Loco-Up), respectively ( Figure 2C). However, the Rpd3 and Loco did not affect expressions of each other. Among the 39 candidate genes (Figure 2A), we next examined more significantly changed genes with more than 1.5-fold changes [21][22][23] in both Rpd3-Down and Loco-Up groups ( Figure 2D). Interestingly, the activities of catabolic enzymes such as mannosidase, lipase, endopeptidase, and phosphodiesterase [24] were reduced in the long-lived flies with Rpd3 downregulation ( Figure 2D). Uptake and storage proteins (ninaD and Lsp2) of diets to be catabolized [25,26] were also decreased in the flies with longer lifespan ( Figure 2D). Inversely, those catabolic activities that break down carbohydrates, lipids, and peptides were high in the short lifespan of Loco-upregulated flies ( Figure 2D). Other notable changes were an apparent decrease in the detoxifying molecule and antibacterial AGING peptides (AMP) in the longer lifespan of Rpd3 downregulation ( Figure 2D). As defending mechanisms, these proteins are essential to protect flies against toxins and bacterial infections [27][28][29], and the AMP expressions increase during the aging process [22], which may prepare pathogen defenses promptly in the old-aged flies that have weak immune responses. However, it has been reported that lesser expressions of AMP genes are found in longer-lived flies [22] and the AMP downregulation enhances stress resistance, lifespan, and fat content in adult flies [30]. Lifespan extension through hormesis (the beneficial effects of low-level toxins and stressors) also occurs with reduced immune function [31]. These data imply that less activation of AMP synthesis has a beneficial effect for the longevity process under the normal condition without bacterial infection. Consistent with this hypo-thesis, higher expressions of AMP genes were detected in the short lifespan of Loco-upregulated flies ( Figure 2D).
On the contrary, expressions of Octα2R, nimC1, and CG9825 genes were increased in the long-lived flies under Rpd3 downregulation ( Figure 2D). Octα2R (α2adrenergic-like octopamine receptor) is activated by octopamine and epinephrine, resulting in the inhibition of cAMP production in a dose-dependent manner [32].
The cAMP reduction has been observed in several longlived animals such as AC5 (type 5 adenylyl cyclase) KO mice and Loco (Regulator of G-protein signaling protein) mutant flies [19,33]. It was reported that reduction of nimC1 (EGF-like receptor) makes flies live for a shorter time [34] and the downregulation of the CG9825 gene (organic anion transporter) is defective in AGING the pain (heat) response [35]. Consistently, the decrease of nimC1 and CG9825 expressions were shown in the short-lived flies with Loco upregulation ( Figure 2D).

Noncoding RNAs are related to the longevity of Rpd3 and Loco
Using ribosomal RNA-depleted total RNA in the RNAseq experiments, we examined whether noncoding RNAs are involved in stress resistance and lifespan regulated by Rpd3 and Loco. With a cut-off value of ± 1.3-fold changes and a p-value < 0.05 (Fisher's exact test), we found that six total noncoding genes exhibit opposite expressions between the rpd3-downregulated long-lived flies and the loco-upregulated short-lived flies (four or two genes in Figure 3A). By RT-PCR analysis ( Figure 3B), we confirmed expression changes of each of the two candidate genes from the different noncoding groups ( Figure 3A). When their expressions were examined in long-lived flies with Loco downregulation [19], especially, the CR45923 and CR43453 genes showed the opposite changes compared to the loco-upregulated short-lived flies ( Figure 3B), indicating that these two noncoding genes are specifically AGING dependent on the Loco change to regulate longevity. Interestingly, their expressions were changed in old age as shown in the loco-upregulated short-lived flies ( Figure 3B). Considering that Loco expression increases during the aging process [19], the expressions of CR45923 and CR43453 in old age may be affected by Loco upregulation, which probably contributes to the acceleration of the aging process. As representatives of coding genes in Figure 2C, the TotM and CG31815 genes also exhibited the comparative expression pattern in Loco-Dn and Old-Age from the Loco-Up ( Figure 3B).
Next, we investigated if the noncoding CR45923 RNA, which is modulated by Rpd3 and Loco for longevity ( Figure 3B), can affect stress resistance and lifespan. Interestingly, the CR45923-upregulated (UAS-CR45923/actG4) flies survived significantly less under the starvation stress than did two control (+/actG4 and UAS-CR45923/+) flies ( Figure 3C), and the median survival time was lower by 21% ( Figure 3D). It is consistent with the report that the Loco-upregulation (UAS-loco/actG4), which increases the CR45923 expression ( Figure 3B), also causes a lower survival rate in response to starvation stress [19]. Similarly, during the other stress (heat and oxidation) tests, the UAS-CR45923/actG4 flies exhibited less survivorship than the control flies, showing 24% and 35% decreases under heat and oxidative stress, respectively ( Figure 3E-F). To test whether any noncoding RNA overexpression induces a negative effect on the stress resistance, we upregulated the roX1 noncoding RNA that functions in dosage compensation of the Drosophila male X chromosome [36]. However, the roX1-upregulated (UAS-roX1/actG4) flies did not show a significant change in survivorship from the three stressors compared to the two control (+/actG4 and UAS-roX1/+) flies ( Figure 3D-F). Overexpression of another noncoding RNA, I-rpd3, to produce a non-specific RNA of inversed rpd3 gene, still did not change the stress resistance of flies ( Figure 3F). Then, it was shown that the lifespan of CR45923-upregulated flies was significantly shortened by 14% ( Figure 3G-H), compared to no effect of roX1 and I-rpd3 upregulation on the lifespan of flies ( Figure 3H). These results demonstrate that the noncoding CR45923 RNA is modulated as a downstream noncoding target of Rpd3 and Loco for the longevity regulation ( Figure 3B), which is hereby referred to as the 'dntRL' gene. Consistently, expression of this dntRL gene was not changed in the flies in which lifespan was not affected, such as I-rpd3 or rpd3WT-upregulated flies (data not shown).

DISCUSSION
Rpd3 or Loco downregulation extends lifespan with higher stress resistance [5,6,19]. Here, we found that the nuclear protein Rpd3 genetically interacts with the cytoplasmic membrane-associated protein Loco in the longevity mechanism ( Figure 1A-D). Given that the changes in Rpd3 and Loco did not affect the expression of each other ( Figure 2C), they may interact posttranslationally through a signaling pathway. As a regulator of G-protein signaling protein, Loco increases adenylate cyclase (AC) activity by inactivating the inhibitory Gαi•GTP protein [17,18,33], and the mammalian homologue, RGS14, interacts with activated H-Ras and Raf-1 kinases, which subsequently inhibit ERK phosphorylation [37][38][39]. Consistently, we previously showed that downregulation of Loco significantly diminishes cAMP amounts [19] and increases p-ERK levels with higher resistance to the oxidative stress [12]. In mammals, p-ERK is shown to interact with PP1 (protein phosphatase 1) that dephosphorylates p-HDAC1 [40][41][42]. Considering mammalian HDAC1 phosphorylation promotes complex formation and enhances the enzyme activity of HDAC1 [42][43][44], one possibility is that Loco downregulation may decrease Rpd3 activity through the reduction of phospho-Rpd3 levels, subsequently resulting in the longer lifespan ( Figure 1).
A second possibility of interaction between Rpd3 and Loco is that they regulate the metabolic pathways that converge to impact longevity ( Figure 2). When we examined the target genes showing opposite expression between the rpd3-downregulated long-lived flies and the loco-upregulated short-lived flies (Figure 2A-C), we found that the expressions of catabolism process genes were significantly reduced in the long-lived flies ( Figure 2D). Given that these gene expressions were analyzed in young flies (2 days of age in Figure 2A), the reduced catabolism is considered to be necessary from a young age for the longer lifespan of the Rpd3-and Loco-downregulated old flies ( Figure 2D). This reduced catabolism is related to the dietary restriction (DR) that extends lifespan in several species [39]. Also, it was recently reported that Rpd3 interacts partially with the insulin signaling pathway of the DR longevity mechanism [8,45].
The noncoding RNA, dntRL (CR45923), was found to be a putative target gene that is modulated by Rpd3 and Loco for the longevity ( Figure 3B). Surprisingly, this RNA itself could affect stress resistance and lifespan ( Figure 3C-H). The fly database (http://flybase.org) indicates that the dntRL gene is expressed in fat body tissue, which functions in metabolic homeostasis, stress tolerance, growth, and longevity in Drosophila [46,47]. The antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) genes are also dominantly expressed in the fat body [27] as other target genes modulated by Rpd3 and Loco for the longevity ( Figure 3B). Together with a report that the AGING dntRL gene was screened during a mitochondrial disease-related study [48], it is considered that the dntRL gene may be involved in the metabolic mechanism as a long noncoding RNA (1,364 nt).

Fly genotypes and constructs
The y 1 w 1 (lab stock from Bloomington) flies were used as a wild-type background. The rpd3 -(P{PZ}HDAC1 04556 : Bloomington), UAS-loco (P{XP}loco d06164 : Exelixis at Harvard Medical School), and act-Gal4 (Bloomington) flies were obtained from the Drosophila stock center. The loco -(loco P283 : W. Chia, [17]) and UAS-roX1 (RL. Kelley, [49]) were kindly provided. These flies were six times isogenized with y 1 w 1 before the stress resistance and aging tests. Virgin flies were collected from a bottle in which larval density was controlled in a standard cornmeal medium, and were used for all fly experiments including stress response, aging, and gene expression studies [19]. To construct UAS-CR45923 and UAS-I-rpd3 transgenes (Figure 3), the CR45923 (1,364 bp) and rpd3 (1,563 bp) cDNAs were cloned into the pCRII-TOPO vector (Invitrogen). After the sequences were confirmed, the plasmids were subcloned into an EcoRI/XhoI or XhoI/XbaI digested pUASTattB vector.

Stress response and aging assays
To measure stress responses, 100 newly enclosed flies (20 flies per vial) were kept in a standard cornmeal medium at 25°C for 2 days [9,19,50]. For the heat test, these 2-day-old adult flies were transferred to new vials containing standard cornmeal medium and maintained at 37°C with 30% humidity. For the starvation test, the 2-day-old adult flies were transferred to new vials (2.5 × 9.3 cm) containing two filter circles (2.4-cm diameter, Fisher Scientific) soaked in 300 μl of distilled water, and were maintained at 25°C under moist conditions with 100 μl of water added every 12 hrs. For the oxidative stress test, the 2-day-old adult flies were starved for 6 hrs at 25°C as described above. Then, the flies were transferred to new vials containing two filter circles wetted with 300 μl of 20 mM methyl viologen hydrate (Paraquat, Fisher Scientific) in a 5% sucrose solution and maintained at 25°C. The median survival times of flies under each stress (heat, starvation, or oxidation) were calculated from the survival curves of 3 ~ 6 independent experiments. For the aging test, 200 virgin flies (20 flies per vial) were counted and transferred to fresh standard cornmeal vials every 3 -4 days [9]. Mean lifespan was calculated from the lifespan curves and averaged with standard error of mean (SEM) from several repeat experiments.

RNA-seq and RT-PCR analyses
Total RNAs were extracted with the TRIzol Reagent (Invitrogen) from the whole body of male adult flies and then ribosomal RNAs were depleted from the total RNAs using the RiboMinus Eukaryote Kit (Invitrogen). With these coding and noncoding RNAs, the Illumina compatible strand-specific RNA-Seq protocol was used to make the cDNA library, which was then sequenced by Illumina NextSeq500 sequencer in the Genomics facility (http://research.njms.rutgers.edu/genomics/). The significance of the expression changes was evaluated by the Fisher's exact test (p-value). For the RT-PCR experiment to check transcriptional expression of the genes, 5 μg of the total RNA purified from adult flies were treated with DNase I (RNase-free, Roche) and used to produce oligo dT-primed cDNAs (Super-Script II RT, Invitrogen). Then, the cDNAs were used as templates for quantitative real-time PCR that was performed with power SYBR green PCR mix (Applied Biosystems) [51]. The rp49 gene was used as an internal reference for normalizing the quality of total RNA purified from each fly. Expressional fold of the various genes were determined by the comparative C T method (ABI Prism 7700 Sequence Detection System User Bulletin #2, Applied Biosystems).