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Heterochronic parabiosis reprograms the mouse brain transcriptome by shifting aging signatures in multiple cell types

Authors
Methodios Ximerakis,Kristina M. Holton
Richard M. Giadone,Ceren Ozek,Monika Saxena,Samara Santiago,Xian Adiconis,Danielle Dionne,Lan Nguyen,Kavya M. Shah,Jill M. Goldstein,Caterina Gasperini,Scott L. Lipnick,Sean K. Simmons,Sean M. Buchanan,Amy J. Wagers,Aviv Regev,Joshua Z. Levin,Lee L. Rubin,Kristina Holton,Richard Giadone,Lan Nguyễn,Kavya Shah,Jill Goldstein,Scott Lipnick,Sean Simmons,Sean Buchanan,Amy Wagers,Joshua Levin
+27 authors
,Lee Rubin
Published
Jan 28, 2022
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Abstract

Abstract Aging is a complex process involving transcriptomic changes associated with deterioration across multiple tissues and organs, including the brain. Recent studies using heterochronic parabiosis have shown that various aspects of aging-associated decline are modifiable or even reversible. To better understand how this occurs, we performed single-cell transcriptomic profiling of young and old mouse brains following parabiosis. For each cell type, we catalogued alterations in gene expression, molecular pathways, transcriptional networks, ligand-receptor interactions, and senescence status. Our analyses identified gene signatures demonstrating that heterochronic parabiosis regulates several hallmarks of aging in a cell-type-specific manner. Brain endothelial cells were found to be especially malleable to this intervention, exhibiting dynamic transcriptional changes that affect vascular structure and function. These findings suggest novel strategies for slowing deterioration and driving regeneration in the aging brain through approaches that do not rely on disease-specific mechanisms or actions of individual circulating factors.

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