Abstract

There is a growing realization that some aging-associated phenotypes/diseases have an epigenetic basis. Here, we report the first genome-scale study of epigenomic dynamics during normal human aging. We identify aging-associated differentially methylated regions (aDMRs) in whole blood in a discovery cohort, and then replicate these aDMRs in sorted CD4 + T-cells and CD14 + monocytes in an independent cohort, suggesting that aDMRs occur in precursor haematopoietic cells. Further replication of the aDMRs in buccal cells, representing a tissue that originates from a different germ layer compared with blood, demonstrates that the aDMR signature is a multitissue phenomenon. Moreover, we demonstrate that aging-associated DNA hypermethylation occurs predominantly at bivalent chromatin domain promoters. This same category of promoters, associated with key developmental genes, is frequently hypermethylated in cancers and in vitro cell culture, pointing to a novel mechanistic link between aberrant hypermethylation in cancer, aging, and cell culture.

Keywords

BiologyDNA methylationEpigeneticsChromatinEpigenomicsBivalent chromatinHistoneGeneticsCell biologyDNAGeneNucleosomeGene expression

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Publication Info

Year
2010
Type
article
Volume
20
Issue
4
Pages
434-439
Citations
754
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Closed

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Vardhman K. Rakyan, Thomas A. Down, Siarhei Maslau et al. (2010). Human aging-associated DNA hypermethylation occurs preferentially at bivalent chromatin domains. Genome Research , 20 (4) , 434-439. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.103101.109

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DOI
10.1101/gr.103101.109