Genome instability is a major cause of aging. In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, instability of the ribosomal RNA gene repeat (rDNA) is known to shorten replicative lifespan. In yeast, rDNA instability in an aging cell is associated with accumulation of extrachromosomal rDNA circles (ERCs) which titrate factors critical for lifespan maintenance. ERC accumulation is not detected in mammalian cells, where aging is linked to DNA damage. To distinguish effects of DNA damage from those of ERC accumulation on senescence, we re-analyzed a yeast strain with a replication initiation defect in the rDNA, which limits ERC multiplication. In aging cells of this strain (rARS-∆3) rDNA became unstable, as in wild-type cells, whereas significantly fewer ERCs accumulated. Single-cell aging analysis revealed that rARS-∆3 cells follow a linear survival curve and can have a wild-type replicative lifespan, although a fraction of the cells stopped dividing earlier than wild type. The doubling time of rARS-∆3 cells appears to increase in the final cell divisions. Our results suggest that senescence in rARS-∆3 is linked to the accumulation of DNA damage as in mammalian cells, rather than to elevated ERC level. Therefore, this strain should be a good model system to study ERC-independent aging.
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