Chromatin remodeling in the aging genome of Drosophila

Jason G. Wood(Brown University), Sara Hillenmeyer(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Charles E. Lawrence, Cheng-Yi Chang(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Suzanne Hosier(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Will Lightfoot(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Eric Mukherjee(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Nan Jiang(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Christoph Schorl(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Alexander S. Brodsky(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Nicola Neretti(Brown University), Stephen L. Helfand(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology)
Aging Cell
September 7, 2010
Cited by 199Open Access
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Abstract

Chromatin structure affects the accessibility of DNA to transcription, repair, and replication. Changes in chromatin structure occur during development, but less is known about changes during aging. We examined the state of chromatin structure and its effect on gene expression during aging in Drosophila at the whole genome and cellular level using whole-genome tiling microarrays of activation and repressive chromatin marks, whole-genome transcriptional microarrays and single-cell immunohistochemistry. We found dramatic reorganization of chromosomal regions with age. Mapping of H3K9me3 and HP1 signals to fly chromosomes reveals in young flies the expected high enrichment in the pericentric regions, the 4th chromosome, and islands of facultative heterochromatin dispersed throughout the genome. With age, there is a striking reduction in this enrichment resulting in a nearly equivalent level of H3K9me3 and HP1 in the pericentric regions, the 4th chromosome, facultative heterochromatin, and euchromatin. These extensive changes in repressive chromatin marks are associated with alterations in age-related gene expression. Large-scale changes in repressive marks with age are further substantiated by single-cell immunohistochemistry that shows changes in nuclear distribution of H3K9me3 and HP1 marks with age. Such epigenetic changes are expected to directly or indirectly impinge upon important cellular functions such as gene expression, DNA repair, and DNA replication. The combination of genome-wide approaches such as whole-genome chromatin immunoprecipitation and transcriptional studies in conjunction with single-cell immunohistochemistry as shown here provide a first step toward defining how changes in chromatin may contribute to the process of aging in metazoans.


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