| Literature DB >> 34735656 |
Sonja Heibl1,2, Reinhard Stauder3, Michael Pfeilstöcker4.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To review available data on the relationship of MDS and aging and to address the question if biological changes of (premature) aging are a prerequisite for the development of MDS. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Aging; CHIP; Clonality; Elderly; Myelodysplastic syndromes; Myeloid neoplasia
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34735656 PMCID: PMC8568861 DOI: 10.1007/s11912-021-01136-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol Rep ISSN: 1523-3790 Impact factor: 5.075
Definitions of pre-MDS conditions and MDS (adapted from 5): ICUS, idiopathic cytopenia of unknown significance; CHIP, clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential; CCUS, clonal cytopenia of unknown significance
| ICUS | Peripheral cytopenia, MDS criteria not fulfilled, no MDS-related mutations, no or only mild cytopenia (< 10%) |
| CHIP | No peripheral cytopenia, MDS criteria not fulfilled, no MDS-related mutations, no or only mild dysplasia (< 10%), blasts < 5% |
| CCUS | Peripheral cytopenia, MDS criteria not fulfilled, one or more MDS-related mutations, no or only mild dysplasia (< 10%), blasts < 5% |
| MDS | Peripheral cytopenia with no evidence of any other underlying cause, BM failure, substantial dysplasia in one or more cell lineages (at least 10% dysplastic cells in any lineage), blasts 5–19%, (not mandatory: MDS-associated chromosomal abnormalities or MDS-associated somatic mutations) |
Comparison of biologic features in MDS and Aging (for references, see the main text)
| Biology of MDS and aging—a comparison | ||
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | MDS | Aging |
| Genomic instability | Initiates clonal hematopoiesis and is a driver of clonal evolution and progression in MDS | Genomic damage is associated with aging. Disorders with chromosomal instability such as Werner syndrome are characterized by a progeroid phenotype |
| Cellular senescence and telomere attrition | Telomere shortening as a factor for chromosomal instability | Telomere length determines the so-called replicative senescence Increase in the number of senescent cells |
| Epigenetic alterations | Main factor for dysregulated gene expression of relevant genes that leads to MDS phenotype of dysplasia and cytopenia | Profound impact in aging. Manipulation of the epigenome may improve age-related diseases and increase lifespan |
| RNA splicing | In many subtypes of MDS, RNA splicing defects confer altered protein expression patterns that in consequence produce the MDS phenotype | Alterations in RNA splicing are associated with senescence and aging Splicing defects occur in progeroid syndromes |
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | Affected in MDS with splicing mutations. ROS in tissue damage due to iron overload (MDS = iron loading anemia) | Results in altered multiple cellular functions. An increase in ROS impacts aging as suggested by the free radical theory |
| Stem cell exhaustion and selection | Selection pressure may be similar in their effect on aging hematopoiesis and in clonal evolution that is a main driver of MDS propagation | Functional defects of stem cells and selection from clonal pools result in cellular senescence Plays a role in inflammaging Impaired homing and mobilization and age-associated defects of HSC—microenvironment interaction |
| Stromal niche | An interplay between microenvironment and stem cells is propagating the disease by impaired stem cell supporting functions | Changes in cellular composition and function. Direct effects on stem cell aging Effect on impaired function and regenerative capacity of HSCs reflect a common denominator of aging |
| Inflammation/immune system | Both innate and adaptive immune responses are shown to be affected. Immune activation and hyperinflammation in MDS are highlighted by systemic autoimmune and autoinflammatory manifestations (SIAM) | Infllammaging describes a subclinical systemic sterile inflammation Inflammaging is associated with a variety of common age-associated diseases such as cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative diseases, sarcopenia, and osteoporosis |
| Altered intercellular communication | Signaling alterations affect the regulation of hematopoiesis, proliferation, and inflammatory responses/activation | Inflammaging represents an essential feature of aging and of age-associated diseases |
| Regulation of transcription | Role in enhanced proliferation | DNA damage may lead to deregulation of gene expression and to increased transcriptional noise |
| Deregulated nutrient sensing | Not yet established in MDS pathophysiology | Nutrient-sensing pathways (mTOR, IGF-1) play an essential role in aging processes. Dietary restriction increases the healthy lifespan of many species |
| Loss of proteostasis | Not yet established in MDS pathophysiology | Proteostasis is impaired in aging processes and in age-related diseases such as neuro-degenerative disorders |
Fig. 1MDS as the interplay of a clonal disease and of normal and premature aging. Age-related factors, MDS-related factors, or both are contributors to the development of MDS. Aging may act as the main driver or promotor of MDS that may also arise independently from age. Different subtypes or disease entities of MDS are distinctively affected by aging