The intermittent glycolysis during fasting, physical
exercise, and stress may delay senescence by lowering intracellular
concentration of methylglyoxal, a common intermediate in the Maillard
reaction (glycation).
A simple logic allows to imagine that a situation when food is
available to an animal at all times and in any quantities should be
very seldom. In real life, there are seasons when food is abundant and
seasons when it's scarce. To smoothen the energy delivery to vital
organs, there all kind of depots, most famous (or rather infamous for
us human beings in Western societies) is the fat depot, having
practically unlimited capacity. There is clinical evidence that a human
body can save in this depot enough energy to feed itself for a year.
Vitamins and electrolyte fluids should be adequately supplied of
course, but no calories enter the body - and it survives!
The opposite situation, when animals are allowed to eat as much as
they can, as often as they can, is called ad libitum (AL). In
experiments on beneficial effects of calorie restriction (CR), the food
intake in the AL situation is taken for 100% and then different
percentages of restrictions are applied to see CR effectiveness to slow
down the process of aging, especially brain aging.
In an early study of the energy metabolism McCarter and Palmer (1)
interesting differences were revealed, between rats fed CR diets and
those fed the same food but AL. Although in both groups energy
metabolism was mostly glycolytic, taping in carbohydrate metabolic way,
CR very soon after feeding switched to using their bodies' fat reserves
with their glycolysis suppressed, while the AL group maintained
practically non-stop glycolysis.
So it's been suggested that that the beneficial effects of CR
could be due to suppression of glycolysis and in experiments of Walker
et al. (2) and Partridge and Brand (3) the question of whether the
shortened life-span of AL animals results from some metabolic toxicity,
specifically whether glycolysis is deleterious but possibly hormetic (4)
The hormesis hypotheses by Masoro (5) and Sinclair (6) suggests
that intermittent stress may induce synthesis of long-term protective
functions. Glycolytic intermediates dihydroxyacetone- and
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphates are form methylglyoxal (MG), which is
potentially toxic.
Hipkiss (7) suggested that non-stop glycolysis is deleterious due
to the generation of MG, but periods of glycolysis interruption could
be hormetic. MG damages mitochondria and induces a pro-oxidant state
characteristics to cellular aging. The decreased glycolysis during CR
may delay senescence by lowering intracellular MG concentration
compared to AL animals.
Sources
1. Am. J. Physiol. 1992 263, E448-E452
2. Mech. Ageing Dev. 2005 126, 929-937
3. Mech. Ageing Dev. 2005 126, 911-912
4. Hormesis - An effect in which a toxic substance acts like a
stimulant in small doses, but it is an inhibitor in large doses.
5. Mech. Ageing Dev. 2005 126, 913-922
6. Mech. Ageing Dev. 2005 126, 987-1002.
7. Mech. Ageing Dev. 2006 127 8-15