Systemic deficits in lipid homeostasis promote aging-associated impairments in B cell progenitor development
平衡
祖细胞
祖细胞
神经科学
细胞生物学
干细胞
生物
作者
Silvia Vicenzi,Fangyuan Gao,Parker Côté,Joshua D. Hartman,Lara C. Avsharian,Ashni A. Vora,R. Grant Rowe,Hojun Li,Dorota Skowronska‐Krawczyk,Leslie Crews
Organismal aging has been associated with diverse metabolic and functional changes across tissues. Within the immune system, key features of physiological hematopoietic cell aging include increased fat deposition in the bone marrow, impaired hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) function, and a propensity towards myeloid differentiation. This shift in lineage bias can lead to pre-malignant bone marrow conditions such as clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) or clonal cytopenias of undetermined significance (CCUS), frequently setting the stage for subsequent development of age-related cancers in myeloid or lymphoid lineages. At the systemic as well as sub-cellular level, human aging has also been associated with diverse lipid alterations, such as decreased phospholipid membrane fluidity that arises as a result of increased saturated fatty acid (FA) accumulation and a decay in n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) species by the age of 80 years, however the extent to which impaired FA metabolism contributes to hematopoietic aging is less clear. Here, we performed comprehensive multi-omics analyses and uncovered a role for a key PUFA biosynthesis gene,