Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ageing-related processes are largely conserved, with simple organisms
remaining the main platform to discover and dissect new ageing-associated genes.
Yeasts provide potent model systems to study cellular ageing owing their
amenability to systematic functional assays under controlled conditions. Even
with yeast cells, however, ageing assays can be laborious and
resource-intensive. Here we present improved experimental and computational
methods to study chronological lifespan in Schizosaccharomyces
pombe. We decoded the barcodes for 3206 mutants of the latest
gene-deletion library, enabling the parallel profiling of ∼700 additional
mutants compared to previous screens. We then applied a refined method of
barcode sequencing (Bar-seq), addressing technical and statistical issues raised
by persisting DNA in dead cells and sampling bottlenecks in aged cultures, to
screen for mutants showing altered lifespan during stationary phase. This screen
identified 341 long-lived mutants and 1246 short-lived mutants which point to
many previously unknown ageing-associated genes, including 51 conserved but
entirely uncharacterized genes. The ageing-associated genes showed coherent
enrichments in processes also associated with human ageing, particularly with
respect to ageing in non-proliferative brain cells. We also developed an
automated colony-forming unit assay for chronological lifespan to facilitate
medium- to high-throughput ageing studies by saving time and resources compared
to the traditional assay. Results from the Bar-seq screen showed good agreement
with this new assay, validating 33 genes not previously associated with cellular
ageing. This study provides an effective methodological platform and identifies
many new ageing-associated genes as a framework for analysing cellular ageing in
yeast and beyond.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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