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Wiley InterScience

Aging Cell

Aging Cell

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Volume 6 Issue 6, Pages 775 - 782

Published Online: 7 Sep 2007

Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/The Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland



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Transcriptional instability is not a universal attribute of aging
Luigi A. Warren 1,5 , Derrick J. Rossi 2 , Geoffrey R. Schiebinger 3 , Irving L. Weissman 2 , Stuart K. Kim 4 and Stephen R. Quake 5,6
  1 Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
  2 Department of Pathology and Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
  3 Henry M. Gunn High School, 780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306, USA
  4 Departments of Developmental Biology and Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
  5 Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
  6 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 4000 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815, USA
Correspondence
Stephen R. Quake, Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. Tel.: 650 736 7890; fax: 650 736 1961; e-mail: quake@stanford.edu

Luigi A. Warren and Derrick J. Rossi contributed equally to this work.

Copyright © 2007 The Authors
Journal compilation © Blackwell Publishing Ltd/Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2007
KEYWORDS
aging • FACS • gene regulation • hematopoiesis • single-cell analysis • stem cells

ABSTRACT

It has been proposed that cumulative somatic mutations contribute to the aging process by disrupting the transcriptional networks that regulate cell structure and function. Experimental support for this model emerged from a recent study of cardiomyocytes that showed a dramatic increase in the transcriptional heterogeneity of these long-lived postmitotic cells with age. To determine if regulatory instability is a hallmark of aging in renewing tissues, we evaluated gene expression noise in four hematopoietic cell types: stem cells, granulocytes, naïve B cells and naïve T cells. We used flow cytometry to purify phenotypically equivalent cells from young and old mice, and applied multiplexed quantitative reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction to measure the copy number of six different mRNA transcripts in 324 individual cells. There was a trend toward higher transcript levels in cells isolated from old animals, but no significant increase in transcriptional heterogeneity with age was found in the surveyed populations. Flow cytometric analysis of membrane protein expression also indicated that cell-to-cell variability was unaffected by age. We conclude that large-scale regulatory destabilization is not a universal concomitant of aging, and may be of significance as an aging mechanism primarily in nonrenewing tissues.


Accepted for publication 26 July 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1474-9726.2007.00337.x About DOI

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ANNOUNCEMENT

Research into Ageing
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ANNOUNCEMENT

Aging Cell best paper award

Winner: Rozalyn M. Anderson

Paper: Dynamic regulation of PGC-1α localization and turnover implicates……

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