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How Cells Age

December 1st 2008 08:06
Parallels between mice and yeast uncover a potentially universal aging mechanism.

Elderly mice and aging yeast have more in common than scientists ever suspected. A new study by Harvard Medical School researchers reveals that the biochemical mechanism that makes yeast grow old has a surprising parallel in mice, suggesting it may be a universal cause of aging in all organisms.
How Cells Age
How Cells Age


"It was very exciting when we made the discovery, because it was so unexpected," says David Sinclair, a Harvard Medical School professor of pathology and senior author of the study, published today in Cell.

In yeast, aging--marked by an inability to continue replicating--is modulated by a protein called Sir2, which has counterparts, called sirtuins, in nearly every known organism. Normally, yeast Sir2 attaches to repeating DNA sequences to keep them stable. It also doubles as a DNA repairer, migrating to damaged spots on the genome and helping to patch them up. When a yeast cell is young, DNA damage is minimal, and Sir2 can keep up both these roles. But as the cell ages and accumulates more and more DNA damage, Sir2 becomes too busy with repairs to consistently stabilize those volatile repeating sequences. Left unsupervised, the repeats recombine into little extrachromosomal loops of DNA that build up and prevent the cell from reproducing.


This mechanism was discovered a decade ago in the MIT lab of Leonard Guarente, where Sinclair was then a postdoctoral researcher. For years, says Sinclair, few scientists suspected it had any relevance for understanding the process of aging in humans or other mammals. Although sirtuins have been linked to aging in a wide variety of organisms, their mechanism of action was understood only in yeast. But now it seems a remarkably similar process may underlie aging in mice as well.

One function of the mouse version of Sir2, called SIRT1, is to regulate how genes are expressed in various tissues. Patterns of expression differ among organs--many genes that need to be active in the liver, for instance, must remain silent in the brain. By binding to regulatory regions alongside certain genes, SIRT1 helps dictate those patterns. Because SIRT1 has also been shown to participate in DNA repair, Sinclair and his colleagues wondered whether increasing DNA damage would compromise the protein's normal regulatory role, as is the case with Sir2 in yeast.

Sure enough, when the researchers treated mouse embryonic stem cells with DNA-damaging hydrogen peroxide, SIRT1 migrated away from regulatory regions of the genome and toward the many areas where DNA strands had broken. As a result, genes that were normally shut off suddenly became active. Gene expression patterns, once exquisitely fine-tuned, went haywire.

"This is something that's eerily parallel to what we know in yeast," says Jan Vijg, chair of genetics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, who was not involved in the study.

Yeast are the only organism in which the mechanism of aging is well understood, says Sinclair. "We only know for sure why yeast age," he says. "[With] all the other organisms, it's still a black box. But we're hoping that this is an explanation for all organisms."

By Jocelyn Rice
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