4.7 Article

Meta-analysis of genome-wide DNA methylation and integrative omics of age in human skeletal muscle

期刊

JOURNAL OF CACHEXIA SARCOPENIA AND MUSCLE
卷 12, 期 4, 页码 1064-1078

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcsm.12741

关键词

Skeletal muscle; Ageing; Epigenetics; DNA methylation; Epigenetic clock; Meta-analysis; Omics

资金

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [APP11577321, APP1140644]
  2. Jack Brockoff Foundation
  3. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP190103081, DP200101830]
  4. Collaborative Research Network for Advancing Exercise and Sports Science from Department of Education and Training, Australia [201202]
  5. Bond University CRN-AESS
  6. Australian Government EIF Super Science Funds as part of the Therapeutic Innovation Australia-Queensland Node project
  7. GlaxoSmithKline
  8. North Staffordshire Medical Institute
  9. Society fort Endocrinology
  10. Medical Research Council (MRC)
  11. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
  12. UK Doctoral Training Centre
  13. Norwegian School of Sport Sciences (Norges Idrettshogskole)
  14. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF)] [82DZD00302]
  15. Foundation Scientific Research-Flanders (FWO) [F.0898.15]
  16. Australian Research Council [DP200101830] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study provides a comprehensive understanding of DNA methylation aging in human skeletal muscle, revealing widespread alterations in genes involved in skeletal muscle structure, development, and differentiation. Most differentially methylated genes did not show changes at the mRNA or protein level, but they were enriched for genes with age-related differential mRNA and protein expression. The updated version of the muscle clock showed similar performance to the original version, suggesting high accuracy in predicting age based on DNA methylation patterns.
Background Knowledge of age-related DNA methylation changes in skeletal muscle is limited, yet this tissue is severely affected by ageing in humans. Methods We conducted a large-scale epigenome-wide association study meta-analysis of age in human skeletal muscle from 10 studies (total n = 908 muscle methylomes from men and women aged 18-89 years old). We explored the genomic context of age-related DNA methylation changes in chromatin states, CpG islands, and transcription factor binding sites and performed gene set enrichment analysis. We then integrated the DNA methylation data with known transcriptomic and proteomic age-related changes in skeletal muscle. Finally, we updated our recently developed muscle epigenetic clock (). Results We identified 6710 differentially methylated regions at a stringent false discovery rate <0.005, spanning 6367 unique genes, many of which related to skeletal muscle structure and development. We found a strong increase in DNA methylation at Polycomb target genes and bivalent chromatin domains and a concomitant decrease in DNA methylation at enhancers. Most differentially methylated genes were not altered at the mRNA or protein level, but they were nonetheless strongly enriched for genes showing age-related differential mRNA and protein expression. After adding a substantial number of samples from five datasets (+371), the updated version of the muscle clock (MEAT 2.0, total n = 1053 samples) performed similarly to the original version of the muscle clock (median of 4.4 vs. 4.6 years in age prediction error), suggesting that the original version of the muscle clock was very accurate. Conclusions We provide here the most comprehensive picture of DNA methylation ageing in human skeletal muscle and reveal widespread alterations of genes involved in skeletal muscle structure, development, and differentiation. We have made our results available as an open-access, user-friendly, web-based tool called MetaMeth ().

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