Abstract
Aging is characterized by increased mortality, functional decline, and exponential increases in the incidence of diseases such as cancer, stroke, cardiovascular disease, neurological disease, respiratory disease, etc. Though the role of aging in these diseases is widely accepted and considered to be a common denominator, the underlying mechanisms are largely unknown. A significant age-related feature observed in many population cohorts is somatic mosaicism, the detectable accumulation of somatic mutations in multiple cell types and tissues, particularly those with high rates of cell turnover (e.g., skin, liver, and hematopoietic cells). Somatic mosaicism can lead to the development of cellular clones that expand with age in otherwise normal tissues. In the hematopoietic system, this phenomenon has generally been referred to as “clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential” (CHIP) when it applies to a subset of clones in which mutations in driver genes of hematologic malignancies are found. Other mechanisms of clonal hematopoiesis, including large chromosomal alterations, can also give rise to clonal expansion in the absence of conventional CHIP driver gene mutations. Both types of clonal hematopoiesis (CH) have been observed in studies of animal models and humans in association with altered immune responses, increased mortality, and disease risk. Studies in murine models have found that some of these clonal events are involved in abnormal inflammatory and metabolic changes, altered DNA damage repair and epigenetic changes. Studies in long-lived individuals also show the accumulation of somatic mutations, yet at this advanced age, carriership of somatic mutations is no longer associated with an increased risk of mortality. While it remains to be elucidated what factors modify this genotype-phenotype association, i.e., compensatory germline genetics, cellular context of the mutations, protective effects to diseases at exceptional age, it points out that the exceptionally long-lived are key to understand the phenotypic consequences of CHIP mutations. Assessment of the clinical significance of somatic mutations occurring in blood cell types for age-related outcomes in human populations of varied life and health span, environmental exposures, and germline genetic risk factors will be valuable in the development of personalized strategies tailored to specific somatic mutations for healthy aging.
Highlights
Aging is characterized by widespread functional declines at the cellular and tissue levels leading to increased disease susceptibility and mortality
CAs of somatic origin with an allele frequency threshold of >2% are virtually undetectable in blood-derived DNA of individuals below the age of 45 but are detectable in more than 20% of individuals older than 80 years
An in-silico-informed in-vitro evaluation of the TET2 germline locus identified a causal variant that disrupts a TET2 distal enhancer leading to increased hematopoietic stem cell proliferation. These findings demonstrate that the germline genetic variation can alter the effects of CHIP on hematopoietic stem cell function
Summary
Other mechanisms of clonal hematopoiesis, including large chromosomal alterations, can give rise to clonal expansion in the absence of conventional CHIP driver gene mutations Both types of clonal hematopoiesis (CH) have been observed in studies of animal models and humans in association with altered immune responses, increased mortality, and disease risk. Studies in longlived individuals show the accumulation of somatic mutations, yet at this advanced age, carriership of somatic mutations is no longer associated with an increased risk of mortality While it remains to be elucidated what factors modify this genotype-phenotype association, i.e., compensatory germline genetics, cellular context of the mutations, Clonal Hematopoiesis and Aging protective effects to diseases at exceptional age, it points out that the exceptionally longlived are key to understand the phenotypic consequences of CHIP mutations.
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