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  Hepatic gene body hypermethylation is a shared epigenetic signature of murine longevity

Hahn, O., Stubbs, T. M., Reik, W., Grönke, S., Beyer, A., & Partridge, L. (2018). Hepatic gene body hypermethylation is a shared epigenetic signature of murine longevity. PLoS Genet, 14(11), e1007766. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1007766.

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Hahn, O.1, Author           
Stubbs, T. M., Author
Reik, W., Author
Grönke, S.1, Author           
Beyer, A., Author
Partridge, L.1, Author           
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1Department Partridge - Biological Mechanisms of Ageing, Max Planck Institute for Biology of Ageing, Max Planck Society, ou_1942287              

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Free keywords: Aging/genetics/metabolism Animals Caloric Restriction *DNA Methylation/drug effects Databases, Genetic *Epigenesis, Genetic Female Growth Substances/metabolism Lipid Metabolism/genetics Liver/*metabolism Longevity/*genetics/physiology Male Mice Mice, Inbred C57BL Mice, Inbred DBA Mice, Mutant Strains Receptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 3/genetics Signal Transduction Sirolimus/pharmacology
 Abstract: Dietary, pharmacological and genetic interventions can extend health- and lifespan in diverse mammalian species. DNA methylation has been implicated in mediating the beneficial effects of these interventions; methylation patterns deteriorate during ageing, and this is prevented by lifespan-extending interventions. However, whether these interventions also actively shape the epigenome, and whether such epigenetic reprogramming contributes to improved health at old age, remains underexplored. We analysed published, whole-genome, BS-seq data sets from mouse liver to explore DNA methylation patterns in aged mice in response to three lifespan-extending interventions: dietary restriction (DR), reduced TOR signaling (rapamycin), and reduced growth (Ames dwarf mice). Dwarf mice show enhanced DNA hypermethylation in the body of key genes in lipid biosynthesis, cell proliferation and somatotropic signaling, which strongly correlates with the pattern of transcriptional repression. Remarkably, DR causes a similar hypermethylation in lipid biosynthesis genes, while rapamycin treatment increases methylation signatures in genes coding for growth factor and growth hormone receptors. Shared changes of DNA methylation were restricted to hypermethylated regions, and they were not merely a consequence of slowed ageing, thus suggesting an active mechanism driving their formation. By comparing the overlap in ageing-independent hypermethylated patterns between all three interventions, we identified four regions, which, independent of genetic background or gender, may serve as novel biomarkers for longevity-extending interventions. In summary, we identified gene body hypermethylation as a novel and partly conserved signature of lifespan-extending interventions in mouse, highlighting epigenetic reprogramming as a possible intervention to improve health at old age.

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 Dates: 2018-11-222018-11-22
 Publication Status: Issued
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 Identifiers: Other: 30462643
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1007766
ISSN: 1553-7404 (Electronic)1553-7390 (Linking)
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Title: PLoS Genet
Source Genre: Journal
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Pages: - Volume / Issue: 14 (11) Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: e1007766 Identifier: -