4.7 Article

Aging and obesity prime the methylome and transcriptome of adipose stem cells for disease and dysfunction

期刊

FASEB JOURNAL
卷 37, 期 3, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.202201413R

关键词

Affl; Cd44; diabetes; Dusp6; Itih2; mesenchymal stem cell; multiomics; Nfatc2; oncogenesis; osteoarthritis; tumorigenesis

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The epigenome of stem cells plays a crucial role in regulating gene expression through modification by intrinsic and extrinsic factors. Aging and obesity were found to synergistically modify the epigenome of adult adipose stem cells (ASCs), leading to global DNA hypomethylation. Functional pathway analysis identified several genes with important roles in progenitors and obesity-related diseases that were hypomethylated in both aging and obesity. Further studies are needed to validate the roles of these genes in aging- and obesity-associated pathologies.
The epigenome of stem cells occupies a critical interface between genes and environment, serving to regulate expression through modification by intrinsic and extrinsic factors. We hypothesized that aging and obesity, which represent major risk factors for a variety of diseases, synergistically modify the epigenome of adult adipose stem cells (ASCs). Using integrated RNA- and targeted bisulfite-sequencing in murine ASCs from lean and obese mice at 5- and 12-months of age, we identified global DNA hypomethylation with either aging or obesity, and a synergistic effect of aging combined with obesity. The transcriptome of ASCs in lean mice was relatively stable to the effects of age, but this was not true in obese mice. Functional pathway analyses identified a subset of genes with critical roles in progenitors and in diseases of obesity and aging. Specifically, Mapt, Nr3c2, App, and Ctnnb1 emerged as potential hypomethylated upstream regulators in both aging and obesity (AL vs. YL and AO vs. YO), and App, Ctnnb1, Hipk2, Id2, and Tp53 exhibited additional effects of aging in obese animals. Furthermore, Foxo3 and Ccnd1 were potential hypermethylated upstream regulators of healthy aging (AL vs. YL), and of the effects of obesity in young animals (YO vs. YL), suggesting that these factors could play a role in accelerated aging with obesity. Finally, we identified candidate driver genes that appeared recurrently in all analyses and comparisons undertaken. Further mechanistic studies are needed to validate the roles of these genes capable of priming ASCs for dysfunction in aging- and obesity-associated pathologies.

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