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Ageing-associated changes in transcriptional elongation influence longevity

Authors :
Cédric Debès
Antonios Papadakis
Sebastian Grönke
Özlem Karalay
Luke S. Tain
Athanasia Mizi
Shuhei Nakamura
Oliver Hahn
Carina Weigelt
Natasa Josipovic
Anne Zirkel
Isabell Brusius
Konstantinos Sofiadis
Mantha Lamprousi
Yu-Xuan Lu
Wenming Huang
Reza Esmaillie
Torsten Kubacki
Martin R. Späth
Bernhard Schermer
Thomas Benzing
Roman-Ulrich Müller
Adam Antebi
Linda Partridge
Argyris Papantonis
Andreas Beyer
Source :
Nature. 616:814-821
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Physiological homeostasis becomes compromised during ageing, as a result of impairment of cellular processes, including transcription and RNA splicing1–4. However, the molecular mechanisms leading to the loss of transcriptional fidelity are so far elusive, as are ways of preventing it. Here we profiled and analysed genome-wide, ageing-related changes in transcriptional processes across different organisms: nematodes, fruitflies, mice, rats and humans. The average transcriptional elongation speed (RNA polymerase II speed) increased with age in all five species. Along with these changes in elongation speed, we observed changes in splicing, including a reduction of unspliced transcripts and the formation of more circular RNAs. Two lifespan-extending interventions, dietary restriction and lowered insulin–IGF signalling, both reversed most of these ageing-related changes. Genetic variants in RNA polymerase II that reduced its speed in worms5 and flies6 increased their lifespan. Similarly, reducing the speed of RNA polymerase II by overexpressing histone components, to counter age-associated changes in nucleosome positioning, also extended lifespan in flies and the division potential of human cells. Our findings uncover fundamental molecular mechanisms underlying animal ageing and lifespan-extending interventions, and point to possible preventive measures.

Subjects

Subjects :
Multidisciplinary

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
616
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8ac613ca38195d59f9d28e928d640e98