Prelamin A accumulation and stress conditions induce impaired Oct-1 activity and autophagy in prematurely aged human mesenchymal stem cell
Author(s) -
Arantza Infante,
Andrea Gago,
Garbiñe Ruiz de Eguino,
Teresa Calvo-Fernández,
Vanessa GómezVallejo,
Jordi Llop,
Karin Schlangen,
Ane Fullaondo,
Ana M. Aransay,
Abraham Martín,
Clara I. Rodrı́guez
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.100651
Subject(s) - progeria , mesenchymal stem cell , phenotype , premature aging , lamin , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , senescence , autophagy , werner syndrome , stem cell , cancer research , genetics , helicase , apoptosis , rna , nucleus , gene
Aging, a time-dependent functional decline of biological processes, is the primary risk factor in developing diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular or degenerative diseases. There is a real need to understand the human aging process in order to increase the length of disease-free life, also known as "health span". Accumulation of progerin and prelamin A are the hallmark of a group of premature aging diseases but have also been found during normal cellular aging strongly suggesting similar mechanisms between healthy aging and LMNA-linked progeroid syndromes. How this toxic accumulation contributes to aging (physiological or pathological) remains unclear. Since affected tissues in age-associated disorders and in pathological aging are mainly of mesenchymal origin we propose a model of human aging based on mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) which accumulate prelamin A. We demonstrate that prelamin A-accumulating hMSCs have a premature aging phenotype which affects their functional competence in vivo. The combination of prelamin A accumulation and stress conditions enhance the aging phenotype by dysregulating the activity of the octamer binding protein Oct-1This experimental model has been fundamental to identify a new role for Oct-1 in hMSCs aging.
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