학술논문

Accelerated hematopoietic mitotic aging measured by DNA methylation, blood cell lineage, and Parkinson’s disease
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Genomics. 22(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Parkinson's Disease
Neurodegenerative
Brain Disorders
Clinical Research
Genetics
Neurosciences
Aging
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Underpinning research
Neurological
Inflammatory and immune system
Blood Cells
Cell Lineage
DNA Methylation
Epigenesis
Genetic
Humans
Parkinson Disease
Mitotic Age
Epigenetics
DNA methylation
Progression
Parkinson’s Disease
Biological Sciences
Information and Computing Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Bioinformatics
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundAging and inflammation are important components of Parkinson's disease (PD) pathogenesis and both are associated with changes in hematopoiesis and blood cell composition. DNA methylation (DNAm) presents a mechanism to investigate inflammation, aging, and hematopoiesis in PD, using epigenetic mitotic aging and aging clocks. Here, we aimed to define the influence of blood cell lineage on epigenetic mitotic age and then investigate mitotic age acceleration with PD, while considering epigenetic age acceleration biomarkers.ResultsWe estimated epigenetic mitotic age using the "epiTOC" epigenetic mitotic clock in 10 different blood cell populations and in a population-based study of PD with whole-blood. Within subject analysis of the flow-sorted purified blood cell types DNAm showed a clear separation of epigenetic mitotic age by cell lineage, with the mitotic age significantly lower in myeloid versus lymphoid cells (p = 2.1e-11). PD status was strongly associated with accelerated epigenetic mitotic aging (AccelEpiTOC) after controlling for cell composition (OR = 2.11, 95 % CI = 1.56, 2.86, p = 1.6e-6). AccelEpiTOC was also positively correlated with extrinsic epigenetic age acceleration, a DNAm aging biomarker related to immune system aging (with cell composition adjustment: R = 0.27, p = 6.5e-14), and both were independently associated with PD. Among PD patients, AccelEpiTOC measured at baseline was also associated with longitudinal motor and cognitive symptom decline.ConclusionsThe current study presents a first look at epigenetic mitotic aging in PD and our findings suggest accelerated hematopoietic cell mitosis, possibly reflecting immune pathway imbalances, in early PD that may also be related to motor and cognitive progression.