Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
Concordant and discordant DNA methylation signatures of aging in human blood and brain
Pau Farré, Meaghan J. Jones, Michael J. Meaney, Eldon Emberly, Gustavo Turecki, Michael S. Kobor
Epigenetics & Chromatin · 2015 · ▲ 158 citations
Abstract
BACKGROUND: DNA methylation is an epigenetic mark that balances plasticity with stability. While DNA methylation exhibits tissue specificity, it can also vary with age and potentially environmental exposures. In studies of DNA methylation, samples from specific tissues, especially brain, are frequently limited and so surrogate tissues are often used. As yet, we do not fully understand how DNA methylation profiles of these surrogate tissues relate to the profiles of the central tissue of interest. RESULTS: We have adapted principal component analysis to analyze data from the Illumina 450K Human Methylation array using a set of 17 individuals with 3 brain regions and whole blood. All of the top five principal components in our analysis were associated with a variable of interest: principal component 1 (PC1) differentiated brain from blood, PCs 2 and 3 were representative of tissue composition within brain and blood, respectively, and PCs 4 and 5 were associated with age of the individual (PC4 in brain and PC5 in both brain and blood). We validated our age-related PCs in four independent sample sets, including additional brain and blood samples and liver and buccal cells. Gene ontology analysis of all five PCs showed enrichment for processes that inform on the functions of each PC. CONCLUSIONS: Principal component analysis (PCA) allows simultaneous and independent analysis of tissue composition and other phenotypes of interest. We discovered an epigenetic signature of age that is not associated with cell type composition and required no correction for cellular heterogeneity.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1186/s13072-015-0011-y
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-09 MST
Cite this
APA
Farré, P., Jones, M.J., Meaney, M.J., Emberly, E., Turecki, G., & Kobor, M.S. (2015). Concordant and discordant DNA methylation signatures of aging in human blood and brain. <em>Epigenetics & Chromatin</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13072-015-0011-y
Vancouver
Farré P, Jones MJ, Meaney MJ, Emberly E, Turecki G, Kobor MS. Concordant and discordant DNA methylation signatures of aging in human blood and brain. Epigenetics & Chromatin. 2015. doi:10.1186/s13072-015-0011-y.
BibTeX
@article{pau2015Concor,
title = {Concordant and discordant DNA methylation signatures of aging in human blood and brain},
author = {Pau Farré and Meaghan J. Jones and Michael J. Meaney and Eldon Emberly and Gustavo Turecki and Michael S. Kobor},
journal = {Epigenetics & Chromatin},
year = {2015},
doi = {10.1186/s13072-015-0011-y},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Aging 2017
Preprint · CC-BY
Accelerated epigenetic aging in Werner syndrome
The Journal of Infectious Diseases 2015
Open access · OA
HIV-1 Infection Accelerates Age According to the Epigenetic Clock
Epigenomics 2016
Open access · CC-BY
Epigenetic Alterations in Blood Mirror Age-Associated Dna Methylation and Gene Expression Changes in Human Liver
Aging Cell 2021
Open access · CC-BY
Many chronological aging clocks can be found throughout the epigenome: Implications for quantifying biological aging
Human Molecular Genetics 2016
Citation only
DNA methylation profiling in human Huntington's disease brain
Neurobiology of Aging 2017
Open access · CC-BY