TY - JOUR T1 - Divergent age-related methylation patterns in long and short-lived mammals JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/2022.01.16.476530 SP - 2022.01.16.476530 AU - Amin Haghani AU - Nan Wang AU - Ake T. Lu AU - Khyobeni Mozhui AU - Mammalian Methylation Consortium AU - Ken Raj AU - X. William Yang AU - Steve Horvath Y1 - 2022/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/01/17/2022.01.16.476530.abstract N2 - Age-related changes to cytosine methylation have been extensively characterized across the mammalian family. Some cytosines that are conserved across mammals exhibit age-related methylation changes that are so consistent that they were used to successfully develop cross-species age predictors. In a similar vein, methylation levels of some conserved cytosines correlate highly with species lifespan, leading to the development of highly accurate lifespan predictors. Surprisingly, little to no commonality is found between these two sets of cytosines even though the relationship between aging and lifespan is by most measures linked. We ventured to address this conundrum by first identifying age-related cytosines whose methylation levels change in opposite directions between short and long-lived species. We hypothesized that age-related CpGs that are also associated with species lifespan would tap into biological processes that simultaneously impact aging and lifespan. To this end, we analyzed age-related cytosine methylation patterns in 82 mammalian species. For each CpG, we correlated the intra-species age correlation with maximum lifespan across mammalian species. We refer to this correlation of correlations as Lifespan Uber Correlation (LUC). This approach is unique in incorporating age and species lifespan in a single analysis. We identified 629 CpGs with opposing methylation aging patterns in long and short-lived species. Many of these are found to be near BCL11B, NPTN, and HOXC4 loci. Methylation and transcription analyses of Bcl11b knockout mice indicate that this gene partially regulates the methylation state of LUC CpGs. We developed DNAm age estimators (epigenetic clocks) based on LUC CpGs. These LUC clocks exhibited the expected behavior in benchmark aging interventions such as caloric restriction, growth hormone receptor knockout and high-fat diet. Furthermore, we found that Bcl11b heterozygous knockout mice exhibited an increased epigenetic age in the striatum. Overall, we present a bioinformatics approach that identified CpGs and their associated genes implicated both in aging and lifespan. These cytosines lend themselves to developing epigenetic clocks that are sensitive to perturbations that impact both age and lifespan.Competing Interest StatementSH is a founder of the non-profit Epigenetic Clock Development Foundation which plans to license several patents from his employer UC Regents. These patents list SH as an inventor. The other authors declare no conflicts of interest. ER -