3 research outputs found

    Inflammaging is driven by upregulation of innate immune receptors and systemic interferon signaling and is ameliorated by dietary restriction

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    Aging is characterized by a chronic low-grade inflammation known as inflammaging in multiple tissues, representing a risk factor for age-related diseases. Dietary restriction (DR) is the best-known non-invasive method to ameliorate aging in many organisms. However, the molecular mechanism and the signaling pathways that drive inflammaging across different tissues and how they are modulated by DR are not yet understood. Here we identify a multi-tissue gene network regulating inflammaging. This network is characterized by chromatin opening and upregulation in the transcription of innate immune system receptors and by activation of interferon signaling through interferon regulatory factors, inflammatory cytokines, and Stat1-mediated transcription. DR ameliorates aging-induced alterations of chromatin accessibility and RNA transcription of the inflammaging gene network while failing to rescue those alterations on the rest of the genome. Our results present a comprehensive understanding of the molecular network regulating inflammation in aging and DR and provide anti-inflammaging therapeutic targets

    Cracking the Floral Quartet Code: How Do Multimers of MIKC<sup>C</sup>-Type MADS-Domain Transcription Factors Recognize Their Target Genes?

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    MADS-domain transcription factors (MTFs) are involved in the control of many important processes in eukaryotes. They are defined by the presence of a unique and highly conserved DNA-binding domain, the MADS domain. MTFs bind to double-stranded DNA as dimers and recognize specific sequences termed CArG boxes (such as 5′-CC(A/T)6GG-3′) and similar sequences that occur hundreds of thousands of times in a typical flowering plant genome. The number of MTF-encoding genes increased by around two orders of magnitude during land plant evolution, resulting in roughly 100 genes in flowering plant genomes. This raises the question as to how dozens of different but highly similar MTFs accurately recognize the cis-regulatory elements of diverse target genes when the core binding sequence (CArG box) occurs at such a high frequency. Besides the usual processes, such as the base and shape readout of individual DNA sequences by dimers of MTFs, an important sublineage of MTFs in plants, termed MIKCC-type MTFs (MC-MTFs), has evolved an additional mechanism to increase the accurate recognition of target genes: the formation of heterotetramers of closely related proteins that bind to two CArG boxes on the same DNA strand involving DNA looping. MC-MTFs control important developmental processes in flowering plants, ranging from root and shoot to flower, fruit and seed development. The way in which MC-MTFs bind to DNA and select their target genes is hence not only of high biological interest, but also of great agronomic and economic importance. In this article, we review the interplay of the different mechanisms of target gene recognition, from the ordinary (base readout) via the extravagant (shape readout) to the idiosyncratic (recognition of the distance and orientation of two CArG boxes by heterotetramers of MC-MTFs). A special focus of our review is on the structural prerequisites of MC-MTFs that enable the specific recognition of target genes

    IFNγ-Stat1 axis drives aging-associated loss of intestinal tissue homeostasis and regeneration

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    Abstract The influence of aging on intestinal stem cells and their niche can explain underlying causes for perturbation in their function observed during aging. Molecular mechanisms for such a decrease in the functionality of intestinal stem cells during aging remain largely undetermined. Using transcriptome-wide approaches, our study demonstrates that aging intestinal stem cells strongly upregulate antigen presenting pathway genes and over-express secretory lineage marker genes resulting in lineage skewed differentiation into the secretory lineage and strong upregulation of MHC class II antigens in the aged intestinal epithelium. Mechanistically, we identified an increase in proinflammatory cells in the lamina propria as the main source of elevated interferon gamma (IFNγ) in the aged intestine, that leads to the induction of Stat1 activity in intestinal stem cells thus priming the aberrant differentiation and elevated antigen presentation in epithelial cells. Of note, systemic inhibition of IFNγ-signaling completely reverses these aging phenotypes and reinstalls regenerative capacity of the aged intestinal epithelium
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