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Molecular footprint of Medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging

Medawar's mutation accumulation hypothesis explains aging by the declining force of natural selection with age: Slightly deleterious germline mutations expressed in old age can drift to fixation and thereby lead to aging‐related phenotypes. Although widely cited, empirical evidence for this hyp...

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Autores principales: Turan, Zeliha Gözde, Parvizi, Poorya, Dönertaş, Handan Melike, Tung, Jenny, Khaitovich, Philipp, Somel, Mehmet
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6612638/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31062469
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.12965
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author Turan, Zeliha Gözde
Parvizi, Poorya
Dönertaş, Handan Melike
Tung, Jenny
Khaitovich, Philipp
Somel, Mehmet
author_facet Turan, Zeliha Gözde
Parvizi, Poorya
Dönertaş, Handan Melike
Tung, Jenny
Khaitovich, Philipp
Somel, Mehmet
author_sort Turan, Zeliha Gözde
collection PubMed
description Medawar's mutation accumulation hypothesis explains aging by the declining force of natural selection with age: Slightly deleterious germline mutations expressed in old age can drift to fixation and thereby lead to aging‐related phenotypes. Although widely cited, empirical evidence for this hypothesis has remained limited. Here, we test one of its predictions that genes relatively highly expressed in old adults should be under weaker purifying selection than genes relatively highly expressed in young adults. Combining 66 transcriptome datasets (including 16 tissues from five mammalian species) with sequence conservation estimates across mammals, here we report that the overall conservation level of expressed genes is lower at old age compared to young adulthood. This age‐related decrease in transcriptome conservation (ADICT) is systematically observed in diverse mammalian tissues, including the brain, liver, lung, and artery, but not in others, most notably in the muscle and heart. Where observed, ADICT is driven partly by poorly conserved genes being up‐regulated during aging. In general, the more often a gene is found up‐regulated with age among tissues and species, the lower its evolutionary conservation. Poorly conserved and up‐regulated genes have overlapping functional properties that include responses to age‐associated tissue damage, such as apoptosis and inflammation. Meanwhile, these genes do not appear to be under positive selection. Hence, genes contributing to old age phenotypes are found to harbor an excess of slightly deleterious alleles, at least in certain tissues. This supports the notion that genetic drift shapes aging in multicellular organisms, consistent with Medawar's mutation accumulation hypothesis.
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spelling pubmed-66126382019-08-01 Molecular footprint of Medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging Turan, Zeliha Gözde Parvizi, Poorya Dönertaş, Handan Melike Tung, Jenny Khaitovich, Philipp Somel, Mehmet Aging Cell Original Papers Medawar's mutation accumulation hypothesis explains aging by the declining force of natural selection with age: Slightly deleterious germline mutations expressed in old age can drift to fixation and thereby lead to aging‐related phenotypes. Although widely cited, empirical evidence for this hypothesis has remained limited. Here, we test one of its predictions that genes relatively highly expressed in old adults should be under weaker purifying selection than genes relatively highly expressed in young adults. Combining 66 transcriptome datasets (including 16 tissues from five mammalian species) with sequence conservation estimates across mammals, here we report that the overall conservation level of expressed genes is lower at old age compared to young adulthood. This age‐related decrease in transcriptome conservation (ADICT) is systematically observed in diverse mammalian tissues, including the brain, liver, lung, and artery, but not in others, most notably in the muscle and heart. Where observed, ADICT is driven partly by poorly conserved genes being up‐regulated during aging. In general, the more often a gene is found up‐regulated with age among tissues and species, the lower its evolutionary conservation. Poorly conserved and up‐regulated genes have overlapping functional properties that include responses to age‐associated tissue damage, such as apoptosis and inflammation. Meanwhile, these genes do not appear to be under positive selection. Hence, genes contributing to old age phenotypes are found to harbor an excess of slightly deleterious alleles, at least in certain tissues. This supports the notion that genetic drift shapes aging in multicellular organisms, consistent with Medawar's mutation accumulation hypothesis. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-05-06 2019-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6612638/ /pubmed/31062469 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.12965 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Aging Cell published by the Anatomical Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Papers
Turan, Zeliha Gözde
Parvizi, Poorya
Dönertaş, Handan Melike
Tung, Jenny
Khaitovich, Philipp
Somel, Mehmet
Molecular footprint of Medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging
title Molecular footprint of Medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging
title_full Molecular footprint of Medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging
title_fullStr Molecular footprint of Medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging
title_full_unstemmed Molecular footprint of Medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging
title_short Molecular footprint of Medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging
title_sort molecular footprint of medawar’s mutation accumulation process in mammalian aging
topic Original Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6612638/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31062469
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.12965
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