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Título
Age-dependent energy metabolism and transcriptome changes in urine-derived stem cells
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Aging
Women
Urine-derived stem cells
Metabolism
Mitochondria
Machine learning
Transcriptome
Clasificación UNESCO
2407.01 Cultivo Celular
2302.19 Procesos Metabólicos
2415.01 Biología Molecular de Microorganismos
Fecha de publicación
2024-04
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Ferreiro, E., Monteiro, M., Pereira, F., Barroso, C., Egas, C., Macedo, P., Valero, J., Sardão, V. A., y Oliveira, P. J. (2024). Age-dependent energy metabolism and transcriptome changes in urine-derived stem cells. Mechanisms of Ageing and Development, 218, 111912. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mad.2024.111912
Resumen
[EN] The global population over 60 years old is projected to reach 1.5 billion by 2050. Understanding age-related disorders and gender-specificities is crucial for a healthy aging. Reliable age-related biomarkers are needed, preferentially obtained through non-invasive methods. Urine-derived stem cells (UDSCs) can be easily obtained, although a detailed bioenergetic characterization, according to the donor aging, remain unexplored. UDSCs were isolated from young and elderly adult women (22–35 and 70–94 years old, respectively). Surprisingly, UDSCs from elderly subjects exhibited significantly higher maximal oxygen consumption and bioenergetic health index than those from younger individuals, evaluated through oxygen consumption rate. Exploratory data analysis methods were applied to engineer a minimal subset of features for the classification and stratification of UDSCs. Additionally, RNAseq of UDSCs was performed to identify age-related transcriptional changes. Transcriptional analysis revealed downregulation of genes related to glucuronidation and estrogen metabolism, and upregulation of inflammation-related genes in UDSCs from elderly individuals. This study demonstrates unexpected differences in the UDSCs’ OCR between young and elderly individuals, revealing improved bioenergetics in concurrent with an aged-like transcriptome signature. UDSCs offer a non-invasive model for studying age-related changes, holding promise for aging research and therapeutic studies.
URI
ISSN
0047-6374
DOI
10.1016/j.mad.2024.111912
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
Patrocinador
PTDC/BTM-SAL/29297/2017













