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Different responses to DNA damage determine ageing differences between organs

Organs age differently, causing wide heterogeneity in multimorbidity, but underlying mechanisms are largely elusive. To investigate the basis of organ‐specific ageing, we utilized progeroid repair‐deficient Ercc1(Δ) (/−) mouse mutants and systematically compared at the tissue, stem cell and organoid...

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Autores principales: Vougioukalaki, Maria, Demmers, Joris, Vermeij, Wilbert P., Baar, Marjolein, Bruens, Serena, Magaraki, Aristea, Kuijk, Ewart, Jager, Myrthe, Merzouk, Sarra, Brandt, Renata M.C., Kouwenberg, Janneke, van Boxtel, Ruben, Cuppen, Edwin, Pothof, Joris, Hoeijmakers, Jan H. J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9009128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35246937
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.13562
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author Vougioukalaki, Maria
Demmers, Joris
Vermeij, Wilbert P.
Baar, Marjolein
Bruens, Serena
Magaraki, Aristea
Kuijk, Ewart
Jager, Myrthe
Merzouk, Sarra
Brandt, Renata M.C.
Kouwenberg, Janneke
van Boxtel, Ruben
Cuppen, Edwin
Pothof, Joris
Hoeijmakers, Jan H. J.
author_facet Vougioukalaki, Maria
Demmers, Joris
Vermeij, Wilbert P.
Baar, Marjolein
Bruens, Serena
Magaraki, Aristea
Kuijk, Ewart
Jager, Myrthe
Merzouk, Sarra
Brandt, Renata M.C.
Kouwenberg, Janneke
van Boxtel, Ruben
Cuppen, Edwin
Pothof, Joris
Hoeijmakers, Jan H. J.
author_sort Vougioukalaki, Maria
collection PubMed
description Organs age differently, causing wide heterogeneity in multimorbidity, but underlying mechanisms are largely elusive. To investigate the basis of organ‐specific ageing, we utilized progeroid repair‐deficient Ercc1(Δ) (/−) mouse mutants and systematically compared at the tissue, stem cell and organoid level two organs representing ageing extremes. Ercc1(Δ) (/−) intestine shows hardly any accelerated ageing. Nevertheless, we found apoptosis and reduced numbers of intestinal stem cells (ISCs), but cell loss appears compensated by over‐proliferation. ISCs retain their organoid‐forming capacity, but organoids perform poorly in culture, compared with WT. Conversely, liver ages dramatically, even causing early death in Ercc1‐KO mice. Apoptosis, p21, polyploidization and proliferation of various (stem) cells were prominently elevated in Ercc1(Δ) (/−) liver and stem cell populations were either largely unaffected (Sox9+), or expanding (Lgr5+), but were functionally exhausted in organoid formation and development in vitro. Paradoxically, while intestine displays less ageing, repair in WT ISCs appears inferior to liver as shown by enhanced sensitivity to various DNA‐damaging agents, and lower lesion removal. Our findings reveal organ‐specific anti‐ageing strategies. Intestine, with short lifespan limiting time for damage accumulation and repair, favours apoptosis of damaged cells relying on ISC plasticity. Liver with low renewal rates depends more on repair pathways specifically protecting the transcribed compartment of the genome to promote sustained functionality and cell preservation. As shown before, the hematopoietic system with intermediate self‐renewal mainly invokes replication‐linked mechanisms, apoptosis and senescence. Hence, organs employ different genome maintenance strategies, explaining heterogeneity in organ ageing and the segmental nature of DNA‐repair‐deficient progerias.
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spelling pubmed-90091282022-04-15 Different responses to DNA damage determine ageing differences between organs Vougioukalaki, Maria Demmers, Joris Vermeij, Wilbert P. Baar, Marjolein Bruens, Serena Magaraki, Aristea Kuijk, Ewart Jager, Myrthe Merzouk, Sarra Brandt, Renata M.C. Kouwenberg, Janneke van Boxtel, Ruben Cuppen, Edwin Pothof, Joris Hoeijmakers, Jan H. J. Aging Cell Research Articles Organs age differently, causing wide heterogeneity in multimorbidity, but underlying mechanisms are largely elusive. To investigate the basis of organ‐specific ageing, we utilized progeroid repair‐deficient Ercc1(Δ) (/−) mouse mutants and systematically compared at the tissue, stem cell and organoid level two organs representing ageing extremes. Ercc1(Δ) (/−) intestine shows hardly any accelerated ageing. Nevertheless, we found apoptosis and reduced numbers of intestinal stem cells (ISCs), but cell loss appears compensated by over‐proliferation. ISCs retain their organoid‐forming capacity, but organoids perform poorly in culture, compared with WT. Conversely, liver ages dramatically, even causing early death in Ercc1‐KO mice. Apoptosis, p21, polyploidization and proliferation of various (stem) cells were prominently elevated in Ercc1(Δ) (/−) liver and stem cell populations were either largely unaffected (Sox9+), or expanding (Lgr5+), but were functionally exhausted in organoid formation and development in vitro. Paradoxically, while intestine displays less ageing, repair in WT ISCs appears inferior to liver as shown by enhanced sensitivity to various DNA‐damaging agents, and lower lesion removal. Our findings reveal organ‐specific anti‐ageing strategies. Intestine, with short lifespan limiting time for damage accumulation and repair, favours apoptosis of damaged cells relying on ISC plasticity. Liver with low renewal rates depends more on repair pathways specifically protecting the transcribed compartment of the genome to promote sustained functionality and cell preservation. As shown before, the hematopoietic system with intermediate self‐renewal mainly invokes replication‐linked mechanisms, apoptosis and senescence. Hence, organs employ different genome maintenance strategies, explaining heterogeneity in organ ageing and the segmental nature of DNA‐repair‐deficient progerias. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-03-04 2022-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9009128/ /pubmed/35246937 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.13562 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Aging Cell published by the Anatomical Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Vougioukalaki, Maria
Demmers, Joris
Vermeij, Wilbert P.
Baar, Marjolein
Bruens, Serena
Magaraki, Aristea
Kuijk, Ewart
Jager, Myrthe
Merzouk, Sarra
Brandt, Renata M.C.
Kouwenberg, Janneke
van Boxtel, Ruben
Cuppen, Edwin
Pothof, Joris
Hoeijmakers, Jan H. J.
Different responses to DNA damage determine ageing differences between organs
title Different responses to DNA damage determine ageing differences between organs
title_full Different responses to DNA damage determine ageing differences between organs
title_fullStr Different responses to DNA damage determine ageing differences between organs
title_full_unstemmed Different responses to DNA damage determine ageing differences between organs
title_short Different responses to DNA damage determine ageing differences between organs
title_sort different responses to dna damage determine ageing differences between organs
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9009128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35246937
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.13562
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