4.8 Review

Epigenetics, DNA damage, and aging

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 132, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI158446

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R00-AG056656, R01- AG063543, ES029603, U19-AG056278, P01-AG062413, U54- AG076041]
  2. Impetus Grant, Norn Foundation
  3. College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences Bridge Funding
  4. US Department of Agriculture-National Institute of Food and Agriculture [MIN -16-12 9]

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Genome integrity erodes over a human lifespan, resulting in an increased abundance of chromatin changes. Age-related epigenetic changes, such as DNA lesions, genomic mutations, and transcriptional disruptions, contribute to genomic instability and can cause gene dysregulation and cell signaling events that disrupt tissue homeostasis and regeneration.
Over the course of a human lifespan, genome integrity erodes, leading to an increased abundance of several types of chromatin changes. The abundance of DNA lesions (chemical perturbations to nucleotides) increases with age, as does the number of genomic mutations and transcriptional disruptions caused by replication or transcription of those lesions, respectively. At the epigenetic level, precise DNA methylation patterns degrade, likely causing increasingly stochastic variations in gene expression. Similarly, the tight regulation of histone modifications begins to unravel. The genomic instability caused by these mechanisms allows transposon element reactivation and remobilization, further mutations, gene dysregulation, and cytoplasmic chromatin fragments. This cumulative genomic instability promotes cell signaling events that drive cell fate decisions and extracellular communications known to disrupt tissue homeostasis and regeneration. In this Review, we focus on age-related epigenetic changes and their interactions with age-related genomic changes that instigate these events.

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