DNA methylation markers of age(ing) in non‐model animals

Author:

Tangili Marianthi1ORCID,Slettenhaar Annabel J.1,Sudyka Joanna1ORCID,Dugdale Hannah L.12ORCID,Pen Ido1ORCID,Palsbøll Per J.13ORCID,Verhulst Simon1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences University of Groningen Groningen The Netherlands

2. Faculty of Biological Sciences, School of Biology University of Leeds Leeds UK

3. Center for Coastal Studies Provincetown Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractInferring the chronological and biological age of individuals is fundamental to population ecology and our understanding of ageing itself, its evolution, and the biological processes that affect or even cause ageing. Epigenetic clocks based on DNA methylation (DNAm) at specific CpG sites show a strong correlation with chronological age in humans, and discrepancies between inferred and actual chronological age predict morbidity and mortality. Recently, a growing number of epigenetic clocks have been developed in non‐model animals and we here review these studies. We also conduct a meta‐analysis to assess the effects of different aspects of experimental protocol on the performance of epigenetic clocks for non‐model animals. Two measures of performance are usually reported, the R2 of the association between the predicted and chronological age, and the mean/median absolute deviation (MAD) of estimated age from chronological age, and we argue that only the MAD reflects accuracy. R2 for epigenetic clocks based on the HorvathMammalMethylChip4 was higher and the MAD scaled to age range lower, compared with other DNAm quantification approaches. Scaled MAD tended to be lower among individuals in captive populations, and decreased with an increasing number of CpG sites. We conclude that epigenetic clocks can predict chronological age with relatively high accuracy, suggesting great potential in ecological epigenetics. We discuss general aspects of epigenetic clocks in the hope of stimulating further DNAm‐based research on ageing, and perhaps more importantly, other key traits.

Funder

Rijksuniversiteit Groningen

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference89 articles.

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