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The relationship between epigenetic age and the hallmarks of aging in human cells
Sylwia Kabacik, Donna Lowe, Leonie Francina Hendrina Fransen, Martin O. Leonard, Siew‐Lan Ang, Christopher Whiteman, Sarah Corsi, Howard Cohen, Sarah Felton, Radhika Bali, Steve Horvath, Ken Raj
Nature Aging · 2022 · ▲ 215 citations
Genomic instability
Telomere attrition
Epigenetic alterations
Deregulated nutrient-sensing
Mitochondrial dysfunction
Cellular senescence
Stem-cell exhaustion
Human
Abstract
Abstract Epigenetic clocks are mathematically derived age estimators that are based on combinations of methylation values that change with age at specific CpGs in the genome. These clocks are widely used to measure the age of tissues and cells 1,2 . The discrepancy between epigenetic age (EpiAge), as estimated by these clocks, and chronological age is referred to as EpiAge acceleration. Epidemiological studies have linked EpiAge acceleration to a wide variety of pathologies, health states, lifestyle, mental state and environmental factors 2 , indicating that epigenetic clocks tap into critical biological processes that are involved in aging. Despite the importance of this inference, the mechanisms underpinning these clocks remained largely uncharacterized and unelucidated. Here, using primary human cells, we set out to investigate whether epigenetic aging is the manifestation of one or more of the aging hallmarks previously identified 3 . We show that although epigenetic aging is distinct from cellular senescence(definition), telomere(definition) attrition and genomic instability, it is associated with nutrient sensing, mitochondrial activity and stem cell composition.
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- 10.1038/s43587-022-00220-0
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- 2026-06-11 MST
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APA
Kabacik, S., Lowe, D., Fransen, L.F.H., Leonard, M.O., Ang, S., Whiteman, C., Corsi, S., Cohen, H., Felton, S., Bali, R., Horvath, S., & Raj, K. (2022). The relationship between epigenetic age and the hallmarks of aging in human cells. <em>Nature Aging</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43587-022-00220-0
Vancouver
Kabacik S, Lowe D, Fransen LFH, Leonard MO, Ang S, Whiteman C, et al. The relationship between epigenetic age and the hallmarks of aging in human cells. Nature Aging. 2022. doi:10.1038/s43587-022-00220-0.
BibTeX
@article{sylwia2022Therel,
title = {The relationship between epigenetic age and the hallmarks of aging in human cells},
author = {Sylwia Kabacik and Donna Lowe and Leonie Francina Hendrina Fransen and Martin O. Leonard and Siew‐Lan Ang and Christopher Whiteman and Sarah Corsi and Howard Cohen and Sarah Felton and Radhika Bali and Steve Horvath and Ken Raj},
journal = {Nature Aging},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.1038/s43587-022-00220-0},
}
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