Molecular and genetic insights into human ovarian aging from single-nuclei multi-omics analyses

Chen Jin(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Xizhe Wang(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jiping Yang(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Seung-Soo Kim(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Adam D. Hudgins(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Amir Gamliel(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Mingzhuo Pei(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Daniela Contreras(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Melody Devos(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Qinghua Guo(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jan Vijg(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Marco Conti(University of California, San Francisco), Jan H.J. Hoeijmakers(Erasmus MC), Judith Campisi(Buck Institute for Research on Aging), Rogerio A. Løbo(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Zev Williams(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Michael G. Rosenfeld(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yousin Suh(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
Nature Aging
November 22, 2024
Cited by 63Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The ovary is the first organ to age in the human body, affecting both fertility and overall health. However, the biological mechanisms underlying human ovarian aging remain poorly understood. Here we present a comprehensive single-nuclei multi-omics atlas of four young (ages 23–29 years) and four reproductively aged (ages 49–54 years) human ovaries. Our analyses reveal coordinated changes in transcriptomes and chromatin accessibilities across cell types in the ovary during aging, notably mTOR signaling being a prominent ovary-specific aging pathway. Cell-type-specific regulatory networks reveal enhanced activity of the transcription factor CEBPD across cell types in the aged ovary. Integration of our multi-omics data with genetic variants associated with age at natural menopause demonstrates a global impact of functional variants on gene regulatory networks across ovarian cell types. We nominate functional non-coding regulatory variants, their target genes and ovarian cell types and regulatory mechanisms. This atlas provides a valuable resource for understanding the cellular, molecular and genetic basis of human ovarian aging. The molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying ovarian aging are incompletely understood. Here the authors provide single-nuclei RNA and ATAC-seq of human ovarian tissue from four young and four reproductively aged donors, revealing coordinated transcriptomic and epigenomic changes across cell types and highlighting a role for mTOR signaling in reproductive aging.


Related Papers