TY - JOUR
T1 - From DNA damage to mutations
T2 - All roads lead to aging
AU - Vijg, Jan
N1 - Funding Information:
My work is supported by NIH grants AG017242 , AG047200 , AG056278 , AG038072 , ES029519 , HL145560 , the Glenn Foundation for Medical Research and Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine . I thank Dr. Joris Pothof for critically reading the manuscript, Drs. Claudia Gravekamp and Alex Maslov for making the figures and two anonymous reviewers for multiple constructive comments and suggestions to improve the manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021
PY - 2021/7
Y1 - 2021/7
N2 - Damage to the repository of genetic information in cells has plagued life since its very beginning 3–4 billion years ago. Initially, in the absence of an ozone layer, especially damage from solar UV radiation must have been frequent, with other sources, most notably endogenous sources related to cell metabolism, gaining in importance over time. To cope with this high frequency of damage to the increasingly long DNA molecules that came to encode the growing complexity of cellular functions in cells, DNA repair evolved as one of the earliest genetic traits. Then as now, errors during the repair of DNA damage generated mutations, which provide the substrate for evolution by natural selection. With the emergence of multicellular organisms also the soma became a target of DNA damage and mutations. In somatic cells selection against the adverse effects of DNA damage is greatly diminished, especially in postmitotic cells after the age of first reproduction. Based on an abundance of evidence, DNA damage is now considered as the single most important driver of the degenerative processes that collectively cause aging. Here I will first briefly review the evidence for DNA damage as a cause of aging since the beginning of life. Then, after discussing the possible direct adverse effects of DNA damage and its cellular responses, I will provide an overview of the considerable progress that has recently been made in analyzing a major consequence of DNA damage in humans and other complex organisms: somatic mutations and the resulting genome mosaicism. Recent advances in studying somatic mutagenesis and genome mosaicism in different human and animal tissues will be discussed with a focus on the possible mechanisms through which loss of DNA sequence integrity could cause age-related functional decline and disease.
AB - Damage to the repository of genetic information in cells has plagued life since its very beginning 3–4 billion years ago. Initially, in the absence of an ozone layer, especially damage from solar UV radiation must have been frequent, with other sources, most notably endogenous sources related to cell metabolism, gaining in importance over time. To cope with this high frequency of damage to the increasingly long DNA molecules that came to encode the growing complexity of cellular functions in cells, DNA repair evolved as one of the earliest genetic traits. Then as now, errors during the repair of DNA damage generated mutations, which provide the substrate for evolution by natural selection. With the emergence of multicellular organisms also the soma became a target of DNA damage and mutations. In somatic cells selection against the adverse effects of DNA damage is greatly diminished, especially in postmitotic cells after the age of first reproduction. Based on an abundance of evidence, DNA damage is now considered as the single most important driver of the degenerative processes that collectively cause aging. Here I will first briefly review the evidence for DNA damage as a cause of aging since the beginning of life. Then, after discussing the possible direct adverse effects of DNA damage and its cellular responses, I will provide an overview of the considerable progress that has recently been made in analyzing a major consequence of DNA damage in humans and other complex organisms: somatic mutations and the resulting genome mosaicism. Recent advances in studying somatic mutagenesis and genome mosaicism in different human and animal tissues will be discussed with a focus on the possible mechanisms through which loss of DNA sequence integrity could cause age-related functional decline and disease.
KW - Aging
KW - DNA damage
KW - Pathogenic consequences
KW - Somatic mutation
KW - Transcriptional noise
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U2 - 10.1016/j.arr.2021.101316
DO - 10.1016/j.arr.2021.101316
M3 - Review article
C2 - 33711511
AN - SCOPUS:85103325580
SN - 1568-1637
VL - 68
JO - Ageing Research Reviews
JF - Ageing Research Reviews
M1 - 101316
ER -