Login / Signup

A metabolic atlas of mouse aging.

Steven E PilleyDominik AwadDjakim LatumaleaEdgar EsparzaLi ZhangXuanyi ShiMaximilian UnfriedShuo WangRacheal MulondoSriraksha Bharadwaj KashyapDarius MoaddeliPeter SajjakulnukitDamien SuttonHarrison WongAeowynn J CoakleyGilberto GarciaRyo Higuchi-SanabriaSophia LiuBingfei YuWilliam B TuBrian Keith KennedyCostas Andreas LyssiotisPeter J Mullen
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Humans are living longer, but this is accompanied by an increased incidence of age-related chronic diseases. Many of these diseases are influenced by age-associated metabolic dysregulation, but how metabolism changes in multiple organs during aging in males and females is not known. Answering this could reveal new mechanisms of aging and age-targeted therapeutics. In this study, we describe how metabolism changes in 12 organs in male and female mice at 5 different ages. Organs show distinct patterns of metabolic aging that are affected by sex differently. Hydroxyproline shows the most consistent change across the dataset, decreasing with age in 11 out of 12 organs investigated. We also developed a metabolic aging clock that predicts biological age and identified alpha-ketoglutarate, previously shown to extend lifespan in mice, as a key predictor of age. Our results reveal fundamental insights into the aging process and identify new therapeutic targets to maintain organ health.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • single cell
  • public health
  • small molecule
  • gene expression
  • adipose tissue
  • high fat diet induced
  • cancer therapy
  • climate change
  • skeletal muscle
  • dna methylation
  • high speed