The biological age of human tissues and cells may be younger or older
than the expected chronological age. Many genetic and environmental
factors can contribute to this difference. Recently, scientists have
developed various clocks to measure the biological age in humans. Among
them, the
Horvath epigenetic aging clock, a multi-tissue predictor of
age, is the most widely used one. It can cover both
pre- and postnatal lifespans and has proven to be
accurate. However, it remains unknown how its clock ticking rate is
controlled.
It was believed that the epigenetic aging clocks tick due to the erosion of a
hypothetical “epigenetic maintenance system”, in which the epigentic genes set the ticking rate.
Epigenetic genes encode proteins that modify DNA or
histone proteins chemically, which can in turn change the binding or
access of regulatory proteins (i. e. transcription factors) to the DNA
regions that control gene expression (i. e. promoters and enhancers),
thus affecting gene expression. Unlike genetic mutations, epigenetic
modifications are reversible, do not change DNA or protein sequences,
and can occur in response to environmental and developmental cues.
The Horvath clock is made of mathematical models, which are based on a
small set of cytosine methylation (mC) changes at the CpG (“p”
represents a phosphodiester bond between cytosine and guanine) sites in
the human genome. About one half of the CpG sites increases in
methylation while the other half decreases during aging. The clock is
set near “zero” for newborn cells, such as embryonic and pluripotent
stem cells, and the “time” increases due to the methylation changes.
For each tissue, the clock has a unique aging rate. The DNA methylation
data can be obtained applying blood samples to the Illumina
Human-Methylation450 array (450K array), and the “time” value can be
calculated using an online calculator of computational algorithms (
https://dnamage.genetics.ucla.edu/home).
A study by \citet{Martin_Herranz_2019} has identified NSD1, the first gene in the “epigenetic
maintenance system” to have accelerated the Horvath aging clock. The
team screened for the epigenetic genes that could accelerate the
ticking rate of the Horvath clock in the patients who suffered from
developmental diseases due to the mutations of these genes. They
measured the clock aging rate in blood samples and
found that only the Sotos syndrome patients had significantly
accelerated clock aging rate. Sotos syndrome is caused by NSD1
mutations and has a range of aging-like developmental symptoms such as
“prenatal and postnatal overgrowth, facial gestalt, advanced bone age,
developmental delay, higher cancer predisposition, and, in some cases,
heart defects”.
NSD1 encodes a Histone H3 lysine 36 (H3k36) methyltransferase, an
epigenetic regulatory enzyme that can add a mono- or di-methyl group to
the 36th amino acid, lysine (K), of the histone H3
protein. Histone H3 is one of eight histone proteins packing the
genomic DNA to form nucleosomes.
The researchers then conducted genome-wide analyses, confirming that the
NSD1 mutations in Sotos syndrome affected many CpG methylation sites,
some of which were also affected by aging. The measurement strategy was
more accurate than the Horvath clock because the calibrations used a
large number of control samples and a microarray-based method.
Previous studies support that NSD1 can change the ticking rate. For
example, NSD1 can affect DNA methylation indirectly by interacting with
DNA methylation machinery. Several NSD1 interacting proteins in humans
or their homologs in other species have been shown to affect the aging
rate.
This study has established the pivotal role of the H3k36
methyltransferase gene, NSD1, in the epigenetic maintenance system to
determine the ticking rate of the epigenetic aging clock. It showed
that the clock is at least partially controlled genetically, if not
entirely. Interestingly, the clock may have a functional role in the
aging process. This study has provided an excellent model for
investigating many questions related to the human aging rate.
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