作者
Chuqian Liang,Qiong Ke,Zunpeng Liu,Jie Ren,Weiqi Zhang,Jianli Hu,Zehua Wang,Hong Chen,Kai Xia,Xingqiang Lai,Qiaoran Wang,Kuan Yang,Wei Li,Zeming Wu,Chao Wang,Haoteng Yan,Xiaoyu Jiang,Zhejun Ji,Miyang Ma,Xiao Long,Si Wang,Huating Wang,Hao Sun,Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte,Jing Qu,Andy Peng Xiang,Guang‐Hui Liu
摘要
Aging in humans is intricately linked with alterations in circadian rhythms concomitant with physiological decline and stem cell exhaustion. However, whether the circadian machinery directly regulates stem cell aging, especially in primates, remains poorly understood. In this study, we found that deficiency of BMAL1, the only non-redundant circadian clock component, results in an accelerated aging phenotype in both human and cynomolgus monkey mesenchymal progenitor cells (MPCs). Unexpectedly, this phenotype was mainly attributed to a transcription-independent role of BMAL1 in stabilizing heterochromatin and thus preventing activation of the LINE1-cGAS-STING pathway. In senescent primate MPCs, we observed decreased capacity of BMAL1 to bind to LINE1 and synergistic activation of LINE1 expression. Likewise, in the skin and muscle tissues from the BMAL1-deficient cynomolgus monkey, we observed destabilized heterochromatin and aberrant LINE1 transcription. Altogether, these findings uncovered a noncanonical role of BMAL1 in stabilizing heterochromatin to inactivate LINE1 that drives aging in primate cells.