SENS PubMed Publication Search
Cytosine modifications exhibit circadian oscillations that are involved in epigenetic diversity and aging.
Nat Commun. 2018 Feb 13;9(1):644. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-03073-7
Oh G, Ebrahimi S, Carlucci M, Zhang A, Nair A, Groot DE, Labrie V, Jia P, Oh ES, Jeremian RH, Susic M, Shrestha TC, Ralph MR, Gordevičius J, Koncevičius K, Petronis A
Abstract:
Circadian rhythmicity governs a remarkable array of fundamental biological functions and is mediated by cyclical transcriptomic and proteomic activities. Epigenetic factors are also involved in this circadian machinery; however, despite extensive efforts, detection and characterization of circadian cytosine modifications at the nucleotide level have remained elusive. In this study, we report that a large proportion of epigenetically variable cytosines show a circadian pattern in their modification status in mice. Importantly, the cytosines with circadian epigenetic oscillations significantly overlap with the cytosines exhibiting age-related changes in their modification status. Our findings suggest that evolutionary advantageous processes such as circadian rhythmicity can also contribute to an organism's deterioration.
PMID: 29440637
Free Full-Text: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5811577/
Tags: biomarkers, confounding factors, epigenetics, mice