HIV, pathology and epigenetic age acceleration in different human tissues.
Steve HorvathDavid T S LinMichael S KoborJoseph A ZollerJonathan W SaidSusan MorgelloElyse SingerWilliam H YongBeth D JamiesonAndrew J LevinePublished in: GeroScience (2022)
Epigenetic clocks based on patterns of DNA methylation have great importance in understanding aging and disease; however, there are basic questions to be resolved in their application. It remains unknown whether epigenetic age acceleration (EAA) within an individual shows strong correlation between different primary tissue sites, the extent to which tissue pathology and clinical illness correlate with EAA in the target organ, and if EAA variability across tissues differs according to sex. Considering the outsized role of age-related illness in Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 (HIV), these questions were pursued in a sample enriched for tissue from HIV-infected individuals. We used a custom methylation array to generate DNA methylation data from 661 samples representing 11 human tissues (adipose, blood, bone marrow, heart, kidney, liver, lung, lymph node, muscle, spleen and pituitary gland) from 133 clinically characterized, deceased individuals, including 75 infected with HIV. We developed a multimorbidity index based on the clinical disease history. Epigenetic age was moderately correlated across tissues. Blood had the greatest number and degree of correlation, most notably with spleen and bone marrow. However, blood did not correlate with epigenetic age of liver. EAA in liver was weakly correlated with EAA in kidney, adipose, lung and bone marrow. Clinically, hypertension was associated with EAA in several tissues, consistent with the multiorgan impacts of this illness. HIV infection was associated with positive age acceleration in kidney and spleen. Male sex was associated with increased epigenetic acceleration in several tissues. Preliminary evidence indicates that amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is associated with positive EAA in muscle tissue. Finally, greater multimorbidity was associated with greater EAA across all tissues. Blood alone will often fail to detect EAA in other tissues. While hypertension is associated with increased EAA in several tissues, many pathologies are associated with organ-specific age acceleration.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- antiretroviral therapy
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected
- bone marrow
- hepatitis c virus
- genome wide
- hiv positive
- lymph node
- hiv aids
- blood pressure
- mesenchymal stem cells
- endothelial cells
- hiv testing
- adipose tissue
- heart failure
- skeletal muscle
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- atrial fibrillation
- early stage
- machine learning
- copy number
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- big data
- south africa
- mass spectrometry
- sentinel lymph node