bims-minfam Biomed News
on Inflammation and metabolism in ageing and cancer
Issue of 2022–05–15
five papers selected by
Ayesh Seneviratne, Western University



  1. Aging (Albany NY). 2022 May 09. 14(undefined):
      A thought-provoking article by Gems and de Magalhães suggests that canonic hallmarks of aging are superficial imitations of hallmarks of cancer. I took their work a step further and proposed hallmarks of aging based on a hierarchical principle and the hyperfunction theory.To do this, I first reexamine the hallmarks of cancer proposed by Hanahan and Weinberg in 2000. Although six hallmarks of cancer are genuine, they are not hierarchically arranged, i.e., molecular, intra-cellular, cellular, tissue, organismal and extra-organismal. (For example, invasion and angiogenesis are manifestations of molecular alterations on the tissue level; metastasis on the organismal level, whereas cell immortality is observed outside the host).The same hierarchical approach is applicable to aging. Unlike cancer, however, aging is not a molecular disease. The lowest level of its origin is normal intracellular signaling pathways such as mTOR that drive developmental growth and, later in life, become hyperfunctional, causing age-related diseases, whose sum is aging. The key hallmark of organismal aging, from worms to humans, are age-related diseases. In addition, hallmarks of aging can be arranged as a timeline, wherein initial hyperfunction is followed by dysfunction, organ damage and functional decline.
    Keywords:  carcinogenesis; geroscience; hyperfunction theory; mTOR; oncology; rapamycin
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.204082
  2. Nature. 2022 May 11.
      
    Keywords:  Ageing; Neurodegeneration; Neuroscience
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-022-01282-1
  3. Front Oncol. 2022 ;12 901118
      
    Keywords:  BMT; IBMFS; MDS; clonal hematopoiesis; mouse model
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.901118
  4. FASEB J. 2022 May;36 Suppl 1
      Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are responsible for giving rise to all other lineages of blood cells in the body. Over time, mutations in HSCs can promote the outgrowth of clonal populations that outcompete other HSCs, resulting in a phenomenon called Clonal Hematopoiesis of Indeterminate Potential (CHIP). Though not cancerous in and of itself, CHIP can progress to more serious hematologic disorders, such as the Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) and Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). The mechanisms of clonal expansion, by which certain mutant HSCs acquire a competitive advantage over other HSCs, currently remain largely undeciphered, as are the mechanisms by which clonal HSCs drive the initiation of MDS and contribute to the development of AML. Moreover, previous studies have shown that such mutant HSCs are resistant to conventional therapies and may act as reservoirs for disease relapse and progression. In the past, researchers were hindered by bulk cell analyses and the relative rarity of HSCs, but advances in single-cell omics have now enabled us to explore the molecular heterogeneity of clonal HSCs and identify distinct clonal populations based on genotype and cell surface phenotype. We used single cell RNA sequencing to examine the transcriptional dynamics of purified HSCs from MDS and AML patients before and after treatment, as well as from age matched elderly controls. Interestingly, dimensionality reduction methods such as UMAP and tSNE revealed a reservoir of control HSCs that clustered with MDS HSCs. Upon comparison with other normal control HSCs, we found that genes associated with aging, mitochondrial function, and particular ion channels were strongly upregulated in these "MDS-like" control HSCs, while genes involved in ribosomal and translation activity, along with certain surface markers, were substantially downregulated. Additionally, ribosomal transcripts were depleted in MDS HSCs from patients who did not respond to treatment. These results support the notion that the most immature HSCs, which impose the strictest constraints on translation, might clonally expand and initiate CHIP and/or MDS upon acquiring driver mutations, also serving as treatment resistant populations that underlie disease relapse. We also subjected purified MDS HSCs to simultaneous single cell targeted DNA sequencing and cell surface phenotyping, which allowed us to correlate the cell surface phenotype and genotype for specific clonal populations and identify cell surface markers that can be used to isolate HSCs with enhanced engraftment ability. Taken together, these results indicate that combined single cell genotyping and phenotyping can be used to track clonal populations across different stages of pathogenesis, providing further insight about the development of CHIP and its progression to MDS and AML.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1096/fasebj.2022.36.S1.R3308
  5. Immunometabolism. 2022 ;pii: e220011. [Epub ahead of print]4(2):
      Hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) directly initiate a response to bacterial infections by rapidly entering the cell cycle in order to produce mature blood cells. An important issue in the field of HSC biology is to understand how metabolic activities of HSC are fueled during specific condition that require HSC activation. In their paper, Mistry et al. provide evidence that bacterial infections trigger an increased in free fatty acid uptake by HSC that fuel fatty acid oxidation and mitochondrial respiration activities. This increased fatty acid uptake is exclusively dependent on the upregulation of the fatty acid transporter CD36. This study shed important light into the metabolic needs of HSC during septic conditions.
    Keywords:  CD36; fatty acid; hematopoietic stem cells; infection; mitochondria
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.20900/immunometab20220011