Genome Biology (Sep 2018)

Genome organization and chromatin analysis identify transcriptional downregulation of insulin-like growth factor signaling as a hallmark of aging in developing B cells

  • Hashem Koohy,
  • Daniel J. Bolland,
  • Louise S. Matheson,
  • Stefan Schoenfelder,
  • Claudia Stellato,
  • Andrew Dimond,
  • Csilla Várnai,
  • Peter Chovanec,
  • Tamara Chessa,
  • Jeremy Denizot,
  • Raquel Manzano Garcia,
  • Steven W. Wingett,
  • Paula Freire-Pritchett,
  • Takashi Nagano,
  • Phillip Hawkins,
  • Len Stephens,
  • Sarah Elderkin,
  • Mikhail Spivakov,
  • Peter Fraser,
  • Anne E. Corcoran,
  • Patrick D. Varga-Weisz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-018-1489-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 24

Abstract

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Abstract Background Aging is characterized by loss of function of the adaptive immune system, but the underlying causes are poorly understood. To assess the molecular effects of aging on B cell development, we profiled gene expression and chromatin features genome-wide, including histone modifications and chromosome conformation, in bone marrow pro-B and pre-B cells from young and aged mice. Results Our analysis reveals that the expression levels of most genes are generally preserved in B cell precursors isolated from aged compared with young mice. Nonetheless, age-specific expression changes are observed at numerous genes, including microRNA encoding genes. Importantly, these changes are underpinned by multi-layered alterations in chromatin structure, including chromatin accessibility, histone modifications, long-range promoter interactions, and nuclear compartmentalization. Previous work has shown that differentiation is linked to changes in promoter-regulatory element interactions. We find that aging in B cell precursors is accompanied by rewiring of such interactions. We identify transcriptional downregulation of components of the insulin-like growth factor signaling pathway, in particular downregulation of Irs1 and upregulation of Let-7 microRNA expression, as a signature of the aged phenotype. These changes in expression are associated with specific alterations in H3K27me3 occupancy, suggesting that Polycomb-mediated repression plays a role in precursor B cell aging. Conclusions Changes in chromatin and 3D genome organization play an important role in shaping the altered gene expression profile of aged precursor B cells. Components of the insulin-like growth factor signaling pathways are key targets of epigenetic regulation in aging in bone marrow B cell precursors.