scholarly journals Author response: Cell culture-based profiling across mammals reveals DNA repair and metabolism as determinants of species longevity

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siming Ma ◽  
Akhil Upneja ◽  
Andrzej Galecki ◽  
Yi-Miau Tsai ◽  
Charles F Burant ◽  
...  
eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siming Ma ◽  
Akhil Upneja ◽  
Andrzej Galecki ◽  
Yi-Miau Tsai ◽  
Charles F Burant ◽  
...  

Mammalian lifespan differs by >100 fold, but the mechanisms associated with such longevity differences are not understood. Here, we conducted a study on primary skin fibroblasts isolated from 16 species of mammals and maintained under identical cell culture conditions. We developed a pipeline for obtaining species-specific ortholog sequences, profiled gene expression by RNA-seq and small molecules by metabolite profiling, and identified genes and metabolites correlating with species longevity. Cells from longer lived species up-regulated genes involved in DNA repair and glucose metabolism, down-regulated proteolysis and protein transport, and showed high levels of amino acids but low levels of lysophosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylethanolamine. The amino acid patterns were recapitulated by further analyses of primate and bird fibroblasts. The study suggests that fibroblast profiling captures differences in longevity across mammals at the level of global gene expression and metabolite levels and reveals pathways that define these differences.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rose T Byrne ◽  
Audrey J Klingele ◽  
Eric L Cabot ◽  
Wendy S Schackwitz ◽  
Jeffrey A Martin ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noah Jakimo ◽  
Pranam Chatterjee ◽  
Joseph M Jacobson

Oligonucleotide-guided nucleases (OGNs) have enabled rapid advances in precision genome engineering. Though much effort has gone into characterizing and mitigating mismatch tolerance for the most widely adopted OGN, Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 (SpCas9), potential off-target interactions may still limit applications where on-target specificity is critical. Here we present a new axis to control mismatch sensitivity along the recognition-conferring spacer sequence of SpCas9’s guide RNA (gRNA). We introduce mismatch-evading loweredthermostability guides (melt-guides) and exhibit how nucleotide-type substitutions in the spacer can reduce cleavage of sequences mismatched by as few as a single base pair. Cotransfecting melt-guides into human cell culture with an exonuclease involved in DNA repair, we observe indel formation on a standard genomic target at approximately 70% the rate of canonical gRNA and undetectable on off-target data.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine S Xue ◽  
Kathryn A Hooper ◽  
Anja R Ollodart ◽  
Adam S Dingens ◽  
Jesse D Bloom

Author(s):  
Natasa Savic ◽  
Femke CAS Ringnalda ◽  
Helen Lindsay ◽  
Christian Berk ◽  
Katja Bargsten ◽  
...  

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