
Tomas Prolla
· ProfessorUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison · Genetics
Active 1990–2023
About
Tomas Prolla is a Professor in the Department of Genetics at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He earned his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1994 and completed postdoctoral research at Baylor College of Medicine in the Department of Genetics and Medical Genetics. His research program is focused on understanding the molecular basis of the aging process and its retardation by caloric restriction. His studies have uncovered a central role for mitochondria and energy metabolism in aging and its modulation through caloric restriction. He uses the mouse as a model system, constructing models of accelerated or retarded aging through gene targeting in embryonic stem cells and transgenic animal construction. Notably, his laboratory has developed a widely used model of age-related mitochondrial dysfunction involving mice deficient in the exonuclease domain of mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma (PolgD257A). His research has shown that caloric restriction leads to metabolic reprogramming at the transcriptional level, with a focus on the role of the sirtuin SIRT3 in mediating the beneficial effects of caloric restriction in aging. SIRT3, a NAD+ dependent deacetylase located in the mitochondrial matrix, induces metabolic shifts that increase oxidative stress resistance and prevent age-related apoptosis. His long-term goal is to identify critical pathways in aging and find natural or synthetic compounds that modulate these pathways in a favorable manner.
Research topics
- Genetics
- Biology
- Endocrinology
- Pathology
- Medicine
- Anatomy
- Biochemistry
- Internal medicine
Selected publications
Modern Pathology · 2023-09-15 · 9 citations
articleOpen accessLife Sciences · 2023-01-26 · 6 citations
articlebioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2022-05-10
preprintOpen accessCorrespondingSummary Mitochondrial NAD + -dependent protein deacetylase Sirtuin3 (SIRT3) has been proposed to mediate calorie restriction (CR)-dependent metabolic regulation and lifespan extension. Here, we investigated the role of SIRT3 in CR-mediated longevity, mitochondrial function, and aerobic fitness. We report that SIRT3 is required for whole-body aerobic capacity but is dispensable for CR-dependent lifespan extension. Under CR, loss of SIRT3 ( Sirt3 -/- ) yielded a longer overall and maximum lifespan as compared to Sirt3 +/+ mice. This unexpected lifespan extension was associated with altered mitochondrial protein acetylation in oxidative metabolic pathways, reduced mitochondrial respiration, and reduced aerobic exercise capacity. Also, Sirt3 -/- CR mice exhibit lower physical activity and favor fatty acid oxidation during the postprandial period, leading to a pseudo-fasting condition that extends the fasting period. This study shows uncoupling of lifespan and healthspan parameters (aerobic fitness and spontaneous activity), and provides new insights into SIRT3 function in CR adaptation, fuel utilization, and aging.
Aging Cell · 2022 · 24 citations
- Biology
- Endocrinology
- Biochemistry
CR mice exhibit lower spontaneous activity and a trend favoring fatty acid oxidation during the postprandial period. This study shows the uncoupling of lifespan and healthspan parameters (aerobic fitness and spontaneous activity) and provides new insights into SIRT3 function in CR adaptation, fuel utilization, and aging.
Brain Research Bulletin · 2021-07-22 · 10 citations
articleRoles of Bak and Sirt3 in Paraquat-Induced Cochlear Hair Cell Damage
Neurotoxicity Research · 2021-04-26 · 7 citations
articleOpen access- RETRACTED
Retraction Note to: Exercise-induced mitochondrial p53 repairs mtDNA mutations in mutator mice
Skeletal Muscle · 2021-03-30 · 2 citations
retractionAn amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via the original article.
Scientific Reports · 2020 · 32 citations
- Medicine
- Endocrinology
- Pathology
mice displayed a specific bone phenotype characterized by osteopenia of epiphyseal trabecular bone and subchondral cortical plate. Trabecular thickness was significantly associated with osteocyte apoptosis rates and osteoclasts numbers were increased in subchondral bone tissues. While chondrocyte apoptosis rates in articular and growth plate cartilage were similar between groups, homozygous mitochondrial DNA mutator mice displayed elevated numbers of hypertrophic chondrocytes in articular calcified cartilage. Low grade cartilage degeneration, predominantly loss of proteoglycans, was present in all genotypes and the development of osteoarthritis features was not found accelerated in premature aging. Somatically acquired mitochondrial DNA mutations predispose to elevated subchondral bone turnover and hypertrophy in calcified cartilage, yet additional mechanical or metabolic stimuli would seem required for induction and accelerated progression of aging-associated osteoarthritis.
Nutrients · 2020-02-14 · 10 citations
articleOpen accessBackground: We previously described a novel micronutrient blend that behaves like a putative calorie restriction mimetic. The aim of this paper was to analyze the beneficial effects of our micronutrient blend in mice and C. elegans, and compare them with calorie restriction. Methods: Whole transcriptomic analysis was performed in the brain cortex, skeletal muscle and heart in three groups of mice: old controls (30 months), old + calorie restriction and old + novel micronutrient blend. Longevity and vitality were tested in C. elegans. Results: The micronutrient blend elicited transcriptomic changes in a manner similar to those in the calorie-restricted group and different from those in the control group. Subgroup analysis revealed that nuclear hormone receptor, proteasome complex and angiotensinogen genes, all of which are known to be directly related to aging, were the most affected. Furthermore, a functional analysis in C. elegans was used. We found that feeding C. elegans the micronutrient blend increased longevity as well as vitality. Conclusions: We describe a micronutrient supplement that causes similar changes (transcriptomic and promoting longevity and vitality) as a calorie restriction in mice and C. elegans, respectively, but further studies are required to confirm these effects in humans.
Frontiers in Genetics · 2020 · 11 citations
- Biology
- Genetics
mice showed higher levels of the type GfII LINE-1 in the basal ganglia than the wild-type mice did, highlighting the importance of assays that focus on an individual active LINE-1 subfamily.
Recent grants
NIH · $2.0M · 2009
NIH · $699k · 2003
NIH · $1.5M · 2009
NIH · $1.6M · 2017
Frequent coauthors
- 102 shared
Richard Weindruch
- 63 shared
Gregory C. Kujoth
University of Wisconsin–Madison
- 43 shared
Shinichi Someya
University of Florida
- 31 shared
David B. Allison
- 31 shared
Christiaan Leeuwenburgh
University of Florida
- 28 shared
Tsuyoshi Kayo
- 26 shared
Masaru Tanokura
The University of Tokyo
- 26 shared
Jason D. Morrow
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Labs
Education
- 2000
Ph.D., Genetics
University of Wisconsin–Madison
- 1996
M.S., Genetics
University of Wisconsin–Madison
- 1994
B.S., Genetics
University of Wisconsin–Madison
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with Tomas Prolla
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup