| Literature DB >> 29467291 |
Kan Xie1, Devon P Ryan1, Brandon L Pearson1, Kristin S Henzel1, Frauke Neff2,3, Ramon O Vidal4, Magali Hennion4, Isabelle Lehmann1, Melvin Schleif5, Susanne Schröder1, Thure Adler3,6, Birgit Rathkolb3,7, Jan Rozman3,8, Anna-Lena Schütz4, Cornelia Prehn3, Michel E Mickael4, Marco Weiergräber9, Jerzy Adamski3,10, Dirk H Busch6, Gerhard Ehninger11, Anna Matynia12, Walker S Jackson5, Eckhard Wolf7, Helmut Fuchs3, Valerie Gailus-Durner3, Stefan Bonn4,13,14, Martin Hrabě de Angelis3,8,10, Dan Ehninger15.
Abstract
Advanced age is not only a major risk factor for a range of disorders within an aging individual but may also enhance susceptibility for disease in the next generation. In humans, advanced paternal age has been associated with increased risk for a number of diseases. Experiments in rodent models have provided initial evidence that paternal age can influence behavioral traits in offspring animals, but the overall scope and extent of paternal age effects on health and disease across the life span remain underexplored. Here, we report that old father offspring mice showed a reduced life span and an exacerbated development of aging traits compared with young father offspring mice. Genome-wide epigenetic analyses of sperm from aging males and old father offspring tissue identified differentially methylated promoters, enriched for genes involved in the regulation of evolutionarily conserved longevity pathways. Gene expression analyses, biochemical experiments, and functional studies revealed evidence for an overactive mTORC1 signaling pathway in old father offspring mice. Pharmacological mTOR inhibition during the course of normal aging ameliorated many of the aging traits that were exacerbated in old father offspring mice. These findings raise the possibility that inherited alterations in longevity pathways contribute to intergenerational effects of aging in old father offspring mice.Entities:
Keywords: aging; epigenetics; intergenerational inheritance; mTOR; sperm
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29467291 PMCID: PMC5877957 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1707337115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.OFO mice exhibited a reduced life span compared with offspring of young fathers. Survival curves were calculated for OFO (n = 47) and YFO mice (n = 58). Log-rank test showed a significant effect of paternal age on life span (P = 0.0465).
Fig. 2.Exacerbation of aging traits in OFO. (A) Experimental design. (B) Nitrotyrosine abundance, as determined by Western blot, in brain homogenates of aged YFO and OFO animals (old YFO, n = 6 mice from six litters; old OFO, n = 6 mice from six litters) and young adult reference groups (young YFO, n = 6 mice from six litters; young OFO, n = 6 mice from six litters) (age: P < 0.0001; paternal age: P = 0.006; interaction: P = 0.30). (C–N) Histopathological aging traits examined in aged YFO and OFO animals (old YFO, n = 37 mice from 12 litters; old OFO, n = 45 mice from 17 litters) as well as young adult reference groups (young YFO, n = 16 mice from six litters; young OFO, n = 14 mice from seven litters). Shown are examples of histological images, probability maps (generated via automated segmentation of histological images), and if applicable, primary object identification maps, along with the quantification of the respective image features. (C) Bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue (age: P < 0.0001; paternal age: P = 0.02; interaction: P = 0.10); (D) thyroid follicle morphology (form factor; a value of 1 reflecting a perfectly circular structure; values between 1 and 0 report progressively more irregularly shaped structures) (age: P < 0.0001; paternal age: P < 0.0001; interaction: P = 0.18); (E) age-related gland-like structures in the tracheal submucosa (age: P = 0.0008; paternal age: P = 0.02; interaction: P = 0.10); (F) skeletal muscle fiber atrophy (age: P < 0.0001; paternal age: P = 0.007; interaction: P = 0.82); (G) macrovesicular lipidosis affecting the liver (age: P < 0.0001; paternal age: P = 0.14; interaction: P = 0.02); (H) liver microgranulomas (age: P = 0.18; paternal age: P = 0.18; interaction: P = 0.35); (I) myocardial fibrosis (age: P = 0.02; paternal age: P = 0.08; interaction: P = 0.13); (J) elastic fiber content of arterial walls (age: P < 0.0001; paternal age: P = 0.02; interaction: P < 0.0001); (K) testis atrophy (age: P = 0.004; paternal age: P = 0.03; interaction: P = 0.55); (L) renal tubular atrophy (age: P < 0.0001; paternal age: P = 0.046; interaction: P = 0.001); (M) renal vascular hyalinosis (age: P = 0.0003; paternal age: P = 0.27; interaction: P = 0.27); (N) glomerulosclerosis (age: P = 0.0002; paternal age: P = 0.01; interaction: P = 0.02). [Scale bars: 1 mm (C and I); 300 µm (D and G); 100 µm (E, F, and H–N).] *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001. Graphs show mean ± SEM.
Fig. 3.Assessment of mutation, telomeres, and repetitive elements in paternal age effect. (A) To estimate mutation rates, we called private variants in RNA-seq data obtained from YFO and OFO (n = 6 mice from six litters each per condition). We found no determinable difference between the paternal age groups (P = 0.37). Telomere length was shorter in brain tissue of OFO mice (n = 3 mice per group). (B) DNA methylation was reduced in old father sperm and in OFO tissue. Violin plots show distributions of cytosine methylation ratios across Alu and LINE-1 elements in aged (24 mo old, pool of five mice) vs. young sperm (4 mo old, pool of five mice) and between OFO (pool of 10 mice) vs. YFO (pool of 10 mice) mice. (C) Table displaying results of RNA-seq–based repeat expression analysis in old (22 mo, n = 3 mice) vs. young (3 mo, n = 8 mice) sperm, demonstrating increased expression of LINE elements. (D) Analysis of LINE expression in OFO vs. YFO mice (n = 4 mice per group, 4 wk old, hippocampus) indicates a potential increase but without reaching statistical significance (P = 0.057). Graphs, unless otherwise stated, display mean ± SEM.
Fig. 4.Epigenetic changes in aged sperm implicated alterations in the mTOR pathway. (A) Whole genome, single-base resolution methylome analyses (RRBS) identified differentially methylated promoters in aged sperm. Shown is the total number of differentially methylated regions (FDR < 0.1) within promoters and significantly enriched canonical pathways among the genes with differentially methylated (FDR < 0.1 or P < 0.05) regions in their promoters. (B) Differentially expressed sRNAs in sperm. (C) Interaction network of differentially expressed miRNAs targeting components on the mTOR pathway. Green denotes miRNAs down-regulated in aged sperm; red indicates miRNAs up-regulated in aged sperm. Genes denoted in yellow additionally contained a differentially methylated region within their promoter (which were all hypomethylated in aged sperm, except for Pdcd4, which contained a hypermethylated promoter region). (D) Identified hot spot for H3K27me3 modification differences between old and young sperm. This whole region on chromosome 5 featured an increased signal of H3K27me3 in old father samples compared with young father samples (black regions under horizontal axis indicate loci of differential histone posttranslational modifications, or dHPTMs). Most of the genes in this region belong to a family of spermatogenesis-related genes (Speer).
Fig. 5.Overactive mTOR signaling in OFO. (A) Experimental design; analyses of genome-wide DNA methylation changes, transcriptional effects, and signaling alterations were carried out in tissue derived from 4-wk-old OFO and YFO mice. (B) Whole-genome, single-base resolution methylome analyses (RRBS) identified differentially methylated promoters in F1 offspring tissue (YFO vs. OFO). Shown is the total number of differentially methylated (FDR < 0.1) regions within promoters, proportions of hypo- vs. hypermethylated regions, as well as (C) significantly enriched canonical pathways among the genes with differentially methylated (FDR < 0.1 or P < 0.05) regions in their promoters. (D) We used the Ribotag technology together with RNA-seq to define hippocampal gene expression changes associated with activation (Tsc2+/− mutation) and inhibition (rapamycin) of the mTOR signaling pathway. (E) Enriched pathways from RNA-seq experiments revealed correspondence in Tsc2+/− mutants and OFO animals, with largely inverted changes in rapamycin-treated animals: Gene expression changes induced by the Tsc2+/− mutation and rapamycin predicted oppositional effects on biological functions, such as body size and transcriptional regulation; predicted effects of OFO-related gene expression changes resembled those associated with the Tsc2+/− genotype. Positive z scores, shown in the table, indicate activating effects, while negative z scores imply inhibitory action on the corresponding biological process. (F) Significant, positive correlation between gene expression in mTOR-hyperactive Tsc2+/− mutants (FDR < 0.1) and OFO mice vs. their respective controls. (G) Gene expression changes (P < 0.05) induced by rapamycin or Tsc2 haploinsufficiency showed an inverse correlation. (H) Transcriptional influences of rapamycin (FDR < 0.1) were inversely correlated with OFO mice vs. their respective controls. (I) Western blot experiments revealed an increased activation state of mTORC1 signaling along with an elevated expression of Rptor/Raptor in OFO hippocampus (p-p70S6K, p-4E-BP1, p-S6: n = 12 mice from 12 litters per group; Raptor: n = 6 mice from six litters per group). The bar graph shows the phosphorylation status (i.e., phosphoprotein normalized to total protein) of the mTORC1 downstream effectors ribosomal protein S6, p70S6K, and 4E-BP1, as well as the expression of Rptor (mRNA level analysis) and Raptor (protein level analysis). Also shown are the expression levels of Rictor (n = 6 mice from six litters per group) and the phosphorylation status of Akt at the mTORC2-sensitive site Ser473 (n = 12 mice from 12 litters per group). Graphs show mean ± SEM. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01.
Fig. 6.Rapamycin ameliorated aging traits that were exacerbated in OFO. (A) Experimental design; (B) nitrotyrosine abundance in brain (n = 6 mice per group); (C) bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue; (D) thyroid follicle morphology; (E) age-related gland-like structures in the tracheal submucosa; (F) macrovesicular lipidosis affecting the liver; (G) liver microgranulomas; (H) myocardial fibrosis; (I) elastic fiber content of arterial walls. (C–I) Young, n = 12 mice; old, n = 10 mice; old rapamycin, n = 15 mice. Graphs show mean ± SEM. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001.