Age-related loss of gene-to-gene transcriptional coordination among single cells.
ORAL
Abstract
A long-standing model holds that stochastic aberrations of transcriptional regulation play a key role in the process of ageing. While transcriptional dysregulation is observed in many cell types in the form of increased cell-to-cell variability, its generality to all cell types remains doubted. Here, we propose a new approach for analysing transcriptional regulation in single-cell RNA sequencing data by focusing on the global coordination between the genes rather than the variability of individual genes or correlations between pairs of genes. Consistently, across very different organisms and cell types, we find a decrease in the gene-to-gene transcriptional coordination in ageing cells. In addition, we find that loss of gene-to-gene transcriptional coordination is associated with high mutational load of a specific, age-related signature and with radiation-induced DNA damage. These observations suggest a general, potentially universal, stochastic attribute of transcriptional dysregulation in ageing.
*The National Institutes of Health (R01AI141529, R01HD093761, UH3OD023268, U19AI095219 and U01HL089856). Supported in part by award numbers R01 HL124233 and R01 HL147326 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the FDA CTP and the Azrieli Foundation.
–
Presenters
-
Guy Amit
- Bar Ilan Univ
- Physics, Bar-Ilan University
- Physics department, Bar-Ilan University