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Epigenetic stress responses induce muscle stem cell aging by Hoxa9 developmental signals

The functionality of stem cells declines during aging thereby contributing to aging-associated impairments in tissue regeneration and function(1). Alterations in developmental pathways have been associated with declines in stem cell function during aging(2–6) but the nature of this process remains p...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schwoerer, Simon, Becker, Friedrich, Feller, Christian, Baig, Ali H., Koeber, Ute, Henze, Henriette, Kraus, Johann M., Xin, Beibei, Lechel, André, Lipka, Daniel B., Varghese, Christy S., Schmidt, Manuel, Rohs, Remo, Aebersold, Ruedi, Medina, Kay L., Kestler, Hans A., Neri, Francesco, von Maltzahn, Julia, Tuempel, Stefan, Rudolph, K. Lenhard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5415306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27919074
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature20603
Descripción
Sumario:The functionality of stem cells declines during aging thereby contributing to aging-associated impairments in tissue regeneration and function(1). Alterations in developmental pathways have been associated with declines in stem cell function during aging(2–6) but the nature of this process remains poorly defined. Hox genes are key regulators of stem cells and tissue patterning during embryogenesis with an unknown role in aging(7,8). This study identifies an altered epigenetic stress response in muscle stem cells (also known as satellite cells = SCs) of aged compared to young mice. This includes aberrant global and site-specific induction of active chromatin marks in activated SCs from aged mice resulting in the specific induction of Hoxa9 among all Hox genes. Hoxa9 in turn activates several developmental pathways and represents a decisive factor separating gene expression of SCs from aged compared to young mice. This includes most of the currently known inhibitors of SC function in aging muscle such as Wnt-, TGFß-, JAK/STAT- and senescence signaling(2–4,6). Inhibition of aberrant chromatin activation or deletion of Hoxa9 suffices to improve SC function and muscle regeneration in aged mice, while overexpression of Hoxa9 mimics aging-associated defects in SCs from young mice, which can be rescued by inhibition of Hoxa9-targeted developmental pathways. Together, these data delineate an altered epigenetic stress response in activated SCs from aged mice, which limits SC function and muscle regeneration by Hoxa9-dependent activation of developmental pathways.