4.6 Article

Cell cycle-dependent and -independent telomere shortening accompanies murine brain aging

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages 3397-3420

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/aging.101655

Keywords

cell cycle; cellular senescence; brain aging; RelA subunit of nuclear factor kappa B; telomere length; telomerase reverse transcriptase

Funding

  1. Ministry for Economics, Sciences and Digital Society of Thuringia (TMWWDG) under the framework of the ProExcellence Initiative RegenerAging [RegenerAging-52-5581-413-FSU-I-03/14]
  2. Graduate Academy of the Jena University
  3. Inter-disciplinary Centre for Clinical Research (IZKF) Jena [FF01]
  4. VELUX STIFTUNG

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Replication-based telomere shortening during lifetime is species- and tissue-specific, however, its impact on healthy aging is unclear. In particular, the contribution of telomere truncation to the aging process of the CNS, where replicative senescence alone fails to explain organ aging due to low to absent mitotic activity of intrinsic populations, is undefined. Here, we assessed changes in relative telomere length in non-replicative and replicative neural brain populations and telomerase activity as a function of aging in C57BL/6 mice. Telomeres in neural cells and sub-selected neurons shortened with aging in a cell cycle-dependent and -independent manner, with preponderance in replicative moieties, implying that proliferation accelerates, but is not prerequisite for telomere shortening. Consistent with this telomere erosion, telomerase activity and nuclear TERT protein were not induced with aging. Knockdown of the Rela subunit of NF-kappa B, which controls both telomerase enzyme and subcellular TERT protein allocation, did also not influence telomerase activity or telomere length, in spite of its naive up-regulation selectively under aging conditions. We conclude that telomere instability is intrinsic to physiological brain aging beyond cell replication, and appears to occur independently of a functional interplay with NF-kappa B, but rather as a failure to induce or relocate telomerase.

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