| Literature DB >> 27229519 |
Sara Russo Krauss1, Gerald de Haan2.
Abstract
Stem cells maintain homeostasis in all regenerating tissues during the lifespan of an organism. Thus, age-related functional decline of such tissues is likely to be at least partially explained by molecular events occurring in the stem cell compartment. Some of these events involve epigenetic changes, which may dictate how an aging genome can lead to differential gene expression programs. Recent technological advances have made it now possible to assess the genome-wide distribution of an ever-increasing number of epigenetic marks. As a result, the hypothesis that there may be a causal role for an altered epigenome contributing to the functional decline of cells, tissues, and organs in aging organisms can now be explored. In this paper, we review recent developments in the field of epigenetic regulation of stem cells, and how this may contribute to aging.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27229519 PMCID: PMC4935734 DOI: 10.1007/s00335-016-9645-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mamm Genome ISSN: 0938-8990 Impact factor: 2.957
Fig. 1Epigenetic alterations in aging of stem cells. Upon multiple cell divisions that occur as a function of time, infidelity in exact replication of the epigenome to daughter cells might occur. Both detrimental losses and gains of epigenetic modifications can thus be amplified within the stem cell pool and propagated to the progeny upon differentiation
Analysis of the epigenome: recent methods for single cell or ultra-low-input assays
| Assay | Developer | Input material |
|---|---|---|
| Nano-ChIP-seq | Adli and Bernstein | 10,000 cells for H3k4me3 histone mark |
| Linear DNA amplification (LinDA) | Shankaranarayanan et al. | For transcription factors using 5000 cells and for the H3K4me3 histone modification using 10,000 cells |
| Ultra-low-input micrococcal nuclease-based native ChIP (ULI-NChIP) | Brind’Amour et al. | 10,000 for histone marks |
| ChIPmentation | Schmidl et al. | For several histone marks 10,000 cells per IP, and 100,000 cells for transcription factors |
| Single-cell ChIP-seq | Rotem et al. | One cell. ChIP-seq for H3k4me3 and H3k4me2 |
| Single-cell reduced-representation bisulfite sequencing scRRBS | Guo et al. | One cell. Non-targeted enrichment DNA methylation analysis |
| Low-input and single-cell whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (μWGBS, scWGBS) | Farlik et al. | High-throughput bisulfite sequencing assay for low-input and single-cell samples |
| Single-cell bisulfite sequencing scBS-seq | Smallwood et al. | One cell. Targeted enrichment DNA methylation analysis |