Citation only
via OpenAlex
Epigenetic Drift Is a Determinant of Mammalian Lifespan
Andrew R. Mendelsohn, James W. Larrick
Rejuvenation Research · 2017 · ▲ 53 citations
Abstract
The epigenome, which controls cell identity and function, is not maintained with 100% fidelity in somatic animal cells. Errors in the maintenance of the epigenome lead to epigenetic drift, an important hallmark of aging. Numerous studies have described DNA methylation clocks that correlate epigenetic drift with increasing age. The question of how significant a role epigenetic drift plays in creating the phenotypes associated with aging remains open. A recent study describes a new DNA methylation clock that can be slowed by caloric restriction(definition) (CR) in a way that correlates with the degree of lifespan and healthspan(definition) extension conferred by CR, suggesting that epigenetic drift itself is a determinant of mammalian lifespan. Genetic transplantation using genomic editing of DNA methylation homeostatic genes from long-lived to short-lived species is one way to potentially demonstrate a causative role for DNA methylation. Whether the DNA methylation clock be reset to youthful state, eliminating the effects of epigenetic drift without requiring a pluripotent cell intermediate is a critical question with profound implications for the development of aging therapeutics. Methods that transiently erase the DNA methylation pattern of somatic cells may be developed that reset this aging hallmark with potentially profound effects on lifespan, if DNA methylation-based epigenetic drift really plays a primary role in aging.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1089/rej.2017.2024
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-15 MST
Cite this
APA
Mendelsohn, A.R., & Larrick, J.W. (2017). Epigenetic Drift Is a Determinant of Mammalian Lifespan. <em>Rejuvenation Research</em>. https://doi.org/10.1089/rej.2017.2024
Vancouver
Mendelsohn AR, Larrick JW. Epigenetic Drift Is a Determinant of Mammalian Lifespan. Rejuvenation Research. 2017. doi:10.1089/rej.2017.2024.
BibTeX
@article{andrew2017Epigen,
title = {Epigenetic Drift Is a Determinant of Mammalian Lifespan},
author = {Andrew R. Mendelsohn and James W. Larrick},
journal = {Rejuvenation Research},
year = {2017},
doi = {10.1089/rej.2017.2024},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Journal of Clinical Investigation 2014
Open access · OA
Aging and epigenetic drift: a vicious cycle
Human Molecular Genetics 2023
Open access · CC-BY
Accelerated epigenetic aging and DNA methylation alterations in Berardinelli–Seip congenital lipodystrophy
Methods in molecular biology 2018
Citation only
DNA Methylation as a Biomarker of Aging in Epidemiologic Studies
Aging 2017
Preprint · CC-BY
Accelerated epigenetic aging in Werner syndrome
The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry 2009
Citation only
DNA methylation, an epigenetic mechanism connecting folate to healthy embryonic development and aging
PLoS Genetics 2015
Open access · CC-BY