Department of Medicine, Anschutz Medical Campus, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, Anschutz Medical Campus, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2022 Sep 1;323(3):H538-H558. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00244.2022. Epub 2022 Aug 5.
The risks of heart diseases are significantly modulated by age and sex, but how these factors influence baseline cardiac gene expression remains incompletely understood. Here, we used RNA sequencing and mass spectrometry to compare gene expression in female and male young adult (4 mo) and early aging (20 mo) mouse hearts, identifying thousands of age- and sex-dependent gene expression signatures. Sexually dimorphic cardiac genes are broadly distributed, functioning in mitochondrial metabolism, translation, and other processes. In parallel, we found over 800 genes with differential aging response between male and female, including genes in cAMP and PKA signaling. Analysis of the sex-adjusted aging cardiac transcriptome revealed a widespread remodeling of exon usage patterns that is largely independent from differential gene expression, concomitant with upstream changes in RNA-binding protein and splice factor transcripts. To evaluate the impact of the splicing events on cardiac proteoform composition, we applied an RNA-guided proteomics computational pipeline to analyze the mass spectrometry data and detected hundreds of putative splice variant proteins that have the potential to rewire the cardiac proteome. Taken together, the results here suggest that cardiac aging is associated with 1) widespread sex-biased aging genes and 2) a rewiring of RNA splicing programs, including sex- and age-dependent changes in exon usages and splice patterns that have the potential to influence cardiac protein structure and function. These changes contribute to the emerging evidence for considerable sexual dimorphism in the cardiac aging process that should be considered in the search for disease mechanisms. Han et al. used proteogenomics to compare male and female mouse hearts at 4 and 20 mo. Sex-biased cardiac genes function in mitochondrial metabolism, translation, autophagy, and other processes. Hundreds of cardiac genes show sex-by-age interactions, that is, sex-biased aging genes. Cardiac aging is accompanied with a remodeling of exon usage in functionally coordinated genes, concomitant with differential expression of RNA-binding proteins and splice factors. These features represent an underinvestigated aspect of cardiac aging that may be relevant to the search for disease mechanisms.
心脏病的风险受年龄和性别显著调节,但这些因素如何影响心脏的基础基因表达仍不完全清楚。在这里,我们使用 RNA 测序和质谱比较了雌性和雄性年轻成年(4 个月)和早期衰老(20 个月)小鼠心脏的基因表达,鉴定了数千个年龄和性别依赖的基因表达特征。性别二态性心脏基因广泛分布,参与线粒体代谢、翻译和其他过程。同时,我们发现了 800 多个雌雄之间具有不同衰老反应的基因,包括 cAMP 和 PKA 信号通路中的基因。对性别调整后的衰老心脏转录组的分析揭示了广泛的外显子使用模式重塑,这在很大程度上独立于差异基因表达,伴随着 RNA 结合蛋白和剪接因子转录物的上游变化。为了评估剪接事件对心脏蛋白形式组成的影响,我们应用了一种 RNA 指导的蛋白质组学计算管道来分析质谱数据,并检测到数百种可能的剪接变体蛋白,这些蛋白有可能重新构建心脏蛋白质组。总的来说,这些结果表明,心脏衰老与 1)广泛的性别偏向衰老基因和 2)RNA 剪接程序的重新布线有关,包括性别和年龄依赖性的外显子使用和剪接模式的变化,这些变化有可能影响心脏蛋白的结构和功能。这些变化有助于为心脏衰老过程中存在的相当大的性别二态性提供新的证据,在寻找疾病机制时应考虑这一点。Han 等人使用蛋白质基因组学比较了 4 个月和 20 个月大的雄性和雌性小鼠心脏。性别二态性心脏基因参与线粒体代谢、翻译、自噬和其他过程。数百个心脏基因表现出性别与年龄的相互作用,即性别偏向的衰老基因。心脏衰老伴随着功能协调基因中外显子使用的重塑,伴随着 RNA 结合蛋白和剪接因子的差异表达。这些特征代表了心脏衰老中一个未被充分研究的方面,可能与寻找疾病机制有关。