A multi-omics longitudinal aging dataset in primary human fibroblasts with mitochondrial perturbations

Author:

Sturm GabrielORCID,Monzel Anna S.,Karan Kalpita R.,Michelson Jeremy,Ware Sarah A.,Cardenas AndresORCID,Lin Jue,Bris Céline,Santhanam Balaji,Murphy Michael P.ORCID,Levine Morgan E.,Horvath SteveORCID,Belsky Daniel W.,Wang Shuang,Procaccio Vincent,Kaufman Brett A.ORCID,Hirano Michio,Picard Martin

Abstract

AbstractAging is a process of progressive change. To develop biological models of aging, longitudinal datasets with high temporal resolution are needed. Here we report a multi-omics longitudinal dataset for cultured primary human fibroblasts measured across their replicative lifespans. Fibroblasts were sourced from both healthy donors (n = 6) and individuals with lifespan-shortening mitochondrial disease (n = 3). The dataset includes cytological, bioenergetic, DNA methylation, gene expression, secreted proteins, mitochondrial DNA copy number and mutations, cell-free DNA, telomere length, and whole-genome sequencing data. This dataset enables the bridging of mechanistic processes of aging as outlined by the “hallmarks of aging”, with the descriptive characterization of aging such as epigenetic age clocks. Here we focus on bridging the gap for the hallmark mitochondrial metabolism. Our dataset includes measurement of healthy cells, and cells subjected to over a dozen experimental manipulations targeting oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos), glycolysis, and glucocorticoid signaling, among others. These experiments provide opportunities to test how cellular energetics affect the biology of cellular aging. All data are publicly available at our webtool: https://columbia-picard.shinyapps.io/shinyapp-Lifespan_Study/

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty,Computer Science Applications,Education,Information Systems,Statistics and Probability

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