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Epigenetic aging of the demographically non-aging naked mole-rat

Authors
Csaba Kerepesi,Margarita V. Meer
Julia Ablaeva,Vince G. Amoroso,Sang-goo Lee,Bohan Zhang,Maxim V. Gerashchenko,Alexandre Trapp,Sun Hee Yim,Ake T. Lu,Morgan E. Levine,Andrei Seluanov,Steve Horvath,Thomas J. Park,Vera Gorbunova,Vadim N. Gladyshev,Margarita Meer,Vince Amoroso,Maxim Gerashchenko,Sun Yim,Ake Lu,Morgan Levine,Thomas Park
+21 authors
,Vadim Gladyshev
Published
Jan 17, 2022
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Abstract

Abstract The naked mole-rat (NMR) is an exceptionally long-lived rodent that shows no increase of mortality with age, defining it as a demographically non-aging mammal. Here, we perform bisulfite sequencing of the blood of > 100 NMRs, assessing > 3 million common CpG sites. Unsupervised clustering based on sites whose methylation correlates with age reveals an age-related methylome remodeling, and we also observe a methylome information loss, suggesting that NMRs age. We develop an epigenetic aging clock that accurately predicts the NMR age. We show that these animals age much slower than mice and much faster than humans, consistent with their known maximum lifespans. Interestingly, patterns of age-related changes of clock sites in Tert and Prpf19 differ between NMRs and mice, but there are also sites conserved between the two species. Together, the data indicate that NMRs, like other mammals, epigenetically age even in the absence of demographic aging of this species.

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