Bloom syndrome patients and mice display accelerated epigenetic aging

Author:

Lee Jamie1,Zhang Joshua2ORCID,Flanagan Maeve3,Martinez Julian A.245ORCID,Cunniff Christopher3ORCID,Kucine Nicole3ORCID,Lu Ake T.26ORCID,Haghani Amin26ORCID,Gordevičius Juozas7ORCID,Horvath Steve26ORCID,Chang Vivian Y.189ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology UCLA Los Angeles California USA

2. Department of Human Genetics UCLA Los Angeles California USA

3. Department of Pediatrics Weill Cornell Medical College New York New York USA

4. Division of Medical Genetics UCLA Los Angeles California USA

5. Department of Psychiatry UCLA Los Angeles California USA

6. Altos Labs San Diego California USA

7. The Epigenetic Clock Development Foundation Torrance California USA

8. Children's Discovery and Innovation Institute UCLA Los Angeles California USA

9. Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center UCLA Los Angeles California USA

Abstract

AbstractBloom syndrome (BSyn) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by variants in the BLM gene, which is involved in genome stability. Patients with BSyn present with poor growth, sun sensitivity, mild immunodeficiency, diabetes, and increased risk of cancer, most commonly leukemias. Interestingly, patients with BSyn do not have other signs of premature aging such as early, progressive hair loss and cataracts. We set out to determine epigenetic age in BSyn, which can be a better predictor of health and disease over chronological age. Our results show for the first time that patients with BSyn have evidence of accelerated epigenetic aging across several measures in blood lymphocytes, as compared to carriers. Additionally, homozygous Blm mice exhibit accelerated methylation age in multiple tissues, including brain, blood, kidney, heart, and skin, according to the brain methylation clock. Overall, we find that Bloom syndrome is associated with accelerated epigenetic aging effects in multiple tissues and more generally a strong effect on CpG methylation levels.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Aging

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