Abstract

Quantitative traits often show large variation caused by multiple genetic factors . One such trait is the chronological lifespan of non-dividing yeast cells, serving as a model for cellular aging. Screens for genetic factors involved in aging typically assay mutants of protein-coding genes. To identify natural genetic variants contributing to cellular aging, we exploited two strains of the fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, that differ in chronological lifespan. We generated segregant pools from these strains and subjected them to advanced intercrossing over multiple generations to break up linkage groups. We chronologically aged the intercrossed segregant pool, followed by genome sequencing at different times to detect genetic variants that became reproducibly enriched as a function of age. A region on Chromosome II showed strong positive selection during aging. Based on expected functions, two candidate variants from this region in the long-lived strain were most promising to be causal: small insertions and deletions in the 5'-untranslated regions of ppk31 and SPBC409.08 Ppk31 is an ortholog of Rim15, a conserved kinase controlling cell proliferation in response to nutrients, while SPBC409.08 is a predicted spermine transmembrane transporter. Both Rim15 and the spermine-precursor, spermidine, are implicated in aging as they are involved in autophagy-dependent lifespan extension. Single and double allele replacement suggests that both variants, alone or combined, have subtle effects on cellular longevity. Furthermore, deletion mutants of both ppk31 and SPBC409.08 rescued growth defects caused by spermidine. We propose that Ppk31 and SPBC409.08 may function together to modulate lifespan, thus linking Rim15/Ppk31 with spermidine metabolism.

Highlights

  • BOTH between and within species, even within individual organisms, the lifespan of cells can vary enormously

  • We use such an intercross quantitative trait loci (QTL) approach in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe to uncover genetic variants involved in chronological lifespan

  • To sample the natural variation in cellular longevity, we measured the chronological lifespan of two strains of fission yeast

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Summary

Introduction

BOTH between and within species, even within individual organisms, the lifespan of cells can vary enormously. Studies of other phenotypes have maximized the QTL resolution by applying selection to large pools of segregants from advanced intercrossed lines (AILs), where multiple generations of recombination break up linkage groups to separate nearby variants and generate diverse variant combinations in the segregant pool (Parts et al 2011; Liti and Louis 2012). We use such an intercross QTL approach in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe to uncover genetic variants involved in chronological lifespan. We discuss the possibility that these neighboring genes, both of which have been implicated in autophagy and lifespan, act in the same pathway

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