4.8 Article

Chromatin-modifying genetic interventions suppress age-associated transposable element activation and extend life span in Drosophila

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1604621113

Keywords

aging; heterochromatin; transposable elements; dietary restriction; silencing

Funding

  1. National Institute on Aging (NIA) T32 Training Grant [AG41688, AG47736]
  2. NIA [AG16667, AG24353]
  3. Glenn/American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR) Breakthroughs in Gerontology award
  4. NIH Program Project from the Providence/Boston Center for AIDS Research [AG51449, P30AI042853]
  5. Ellison/AFAR Postdoctoral Fellowship
  6. Nathan Shock Center Pilot Grant
  7. NIH [AG28753, AG50582]

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Transposable elements (TEs) are mobile genetic elements, highly enriched in heterochromatin, that constitute a large percentage of the DNA content of eukaryotic genomes. Aging in Drosophila melanogaster is characterized by loss of repressive heterochromatin structure and loss of silencing of reporter genes in constitutive heterochromatin regions. Using next-generation sequencing, we found that transcripts of many genes native to heterochromatic regions and TEs increased with age in fly heads and fat bodies. A dietary restriction regimen, known to extend life span, repressed the age-related increased expression of genes located in heterochromatin, as well as TEs. We also observed a corresponding age-associated increase in TE transposition in fly fat body cells that was delayed by dietary restriction. Furthermore, we found that manipulating genes known to affect heterochromatin structure, including overexpression of Sir2, Su(var) 3-9, and Dicer-2, as well as decreased expression of Adar, mitigated age-related increases in expression of TEs. Increasing expression of either Su(var) 3-9 or Dicer-2 also led to an increase in life span. Mutation of Dicer-2 led to an increase in DNA double-strand breaks. Treatment with the reverse transcriptase inhibitor 3TC resulted in decreased TE transposition as well as increased life span in TE-sensitized Dicer-2 mutants. Together, these data support the retrotransposon theory of aging, which hypothesizes that epigenetically silenced TEs become deleteriously activated as cellular defense and surveillance mechanisms break down with age. Furthermore, interventions that maintain repressive heterochromatin and preserve TE silencing may prove key to preventing damage caused by TE activation and extending healthy life span.

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