Inter-tissue convergence of gene expression during ageing suggests age-related loss of tissue and cellular identity

Elife. 2022 Jan 31:11:e68048. doi: 10.7554/eLife.68048.

Abstract

Developmental trajectories of gene expression may reverse in their direction during ageing, a phenomenon previously linked to cellular identity loss. Our analysis of cerebral cortex, lung, liver, and muscle transcriptomes of 16 mice, covering development and ageing intervals, revealed widespread but tissue-specific ageing-associated expression reversals. Cumulatively, these reversals create a unique phenomenon: mammalian tissue transcriptomes diverge from each other during postnatal development, but during ageing, they tend to converge towards similar expression levels, a process we term Divergence followed by Convergence (DiCo). We found that DiCo was most prevalent among tissue-specific genes and associated with loss of tissue identity, which is confirmed using data from independent mouse and human datasets. Further, using publicly available single-cell transcriptome data, we showed that DiCo could be driven both by alterations in tissue cell-type composition and also by cell-autonomous expression changes within particular cell types.

Keywords: ageing; development; genetics; genomics; human; mouse; reversal; transcriptome.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aging* / genetics
  • Animals
  • Liver
  • Mammals / genetics
  • Mice
  • Transcriptome*

Associated data

  • GEO/GSE167665
  • GEO/GSE34378
  • GEO/GSE132040

Grants and funding

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.