| Literature DB >> 29452591 |
Robert Lowe1, Carl Barton2, Christopher A Jenkins3, Christina Ernst4, Oliver Forman3, Denise S Fernandez-Twinn5, Christoph Bock6,7,8,9, Stephen J Rossiter10, Chris G Faulkes10, Susan E Ozanne5, Lutz Walter11, Duncan T Odom4, Cathryn Mellersh3, Vardhman K Rakyan12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mammalian species exhibit a wide range of lifespans. To date, a robust and dynamic molecular readout of these lifespan differences has not yet been identified. Recent studies have established the existence of ageing-associated differentially methylated positions (aDMPs) in human and mouse. These are CpG sites at which DNA methylation dynamics show significant correlations with age. We hypothesise that aDMPs are pan-mammalian and are a dynamic molecular readout of lifespan variation among different mammalian species.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; Epigenetics; Methylation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29452591 PMCID: PMC5815211 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-018-1397-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1a Example of called aDMPs. Top: A significant aDMP in human samples (top left) but not in mouse samples (top right). Bottom: A significant aDMP in mouse samples (bottom right) but not in human samples (bottom left). Thick coloured boxes represent a genome-wide significance aDMP in either human (purple) or mouse (red). b A Venn diagram representing the overlap between called aDMPs in mouse and human. c A density plot of the negative log transformed gradients for those aDMPs in non-sequence conserved regions in either mouse (red) or human (purple). d A density plot of the negative log transformed gradients for those aDMPs in regions showing sequence conservation between mouse (red) and human (purple)
Sample information for those used in the paper
| Species | n | Tissue | Age range (weeks) | Reference | Platform | aDMRs (n)a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | 656 | Blood | 988–5252 | Hannum et al. | 450 K | 256 |
| Mouse | 153 | Whole Blood | 0.67–35 | Petkovich et al. | RRBS | 2814 |
| Dog | 48 | Buccal | 13–726.96 | Own | Bis-PCR | 15 |
| NMR | 24 | Liver | 39–1144 | Own | Bis-PCR | 11 |
| Macaque | 6 | Blood | 52–1040 | Own | 450 K | 29 |
| Humpback whale | 45 | Skin | 2.6–1576.953 | Polanowski et al. | Qiagen PyroMark assays | 3 |
| Tc1 | 6 | Liver | 8–52 | Own | 450 K | - |
aThe number of aDMRs is the number of aDMRs used in Fig. 2a
Fig. 2a A bar plot of the mean negative log gradients for six different species. This shows that the rate of methylation change at aDMPs is proportional to the longevity of the species. b A plot showing the gradient of significant aDMPs for the two dog breeds profiled (FCR and MLHD). In each of the six aDMPs (two points have similar gradients and overlap each other), the gradient of the FCR is larger than that of the MLHD. Dashed line is the line which represents equal gradient in both breeds, e.g. y = x
Fig. 3a A bean plot of the methylation levels for CpG Islands (Isl.) and Open Sea (OS) for both probes matching mouse genome and those uniquely mapping to human chromosome 21. b A bean plot of the methylation levels for promoters (P) (defined as 2 kbp upstream from the TSS), gene bodies (B) and intergenic regions (I) (defined as those probes not either in a promoter or gene body). This is shown for both probes matching mouse genome and those uniquely mapping to human chromosome 21. c A scatter plot of the gradients of human chromosome 21 aDMPs in both human samples and the TC1 mouse. There is a significant correlation of 0.49 (P value = 0.011). Highlighted in red are the probes which show the largest gradient in the TC1 mouse. d A scatter plot showing the increased rate of methylation change with respect to age in the human chromosome 21 aDMPs in the Tc1 mouse compared to the same aDMP in human samples