[HTML][HTML] Controlled induction of DNA double-strand breaks in the mouse liver induces features of tissue ageing

RR White, B Milholland, A De Bruin, S Curran… - Nature …, 2015 - nature.com
RR White, B Milholland, A De Bruin, S Curran, RM Laberge, H Van Steeg, J Campisi…
Nature communications, 2015nature.com
DNA damage has been implicated in ageing, but direct evidence for a causal relationship is
lacking, owing to the difficulty of inducing defined DNA lesions in cells and tissues without
simultaneously damaging other biomolecules and cellular structures. Here we directly test
whether highly toxic DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) alone can drive an ageing
phenotype using an adenovirus-based system based on tetracycline-controlled expression
of the SacI restriction enzyme. We deliver the adenovirus to mice and compare molecular …
Abstract
DNA damage has been implicated in ageing, but direct evidence for a causal relationship is lacking, owing to the difficulty of inducing defined DNA lesions in cells and tissues without simultaneously damaging other biomolecules and cellular structures. Here we directly test whether highly toxic DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) alone can drive an ageing phenotype using an adenovirus-based system based on tetracycline-controlled expression of the SacI restriction enzyme. We deliver the adenovirus to mice and compare molecular and cellular end points in the liver with normally aged animals. Treated, 3-month-old mice display many, but not all signs of normal liver ageing as early as 1 month after treatment, including ageing pathologies, markers of senescence, fused mitochondria and alterations in gene expression profiles. These results, showing that DSBs alone can cause distinct ageing phenotypes in mouse liver, provide new insights in the role of DNA damage as a driver of tissue ageing.
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