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Publication : Multiomics reveals glutathione metabolism as a driver of bimodality during stem cell aging.

First Author  Benjamin DI Year  2023
Journal  Cell Metab Volume  35
Issue  3 Pages  472-486.e6
PubMed ID  36854304 Mgi Jnum  J:351825
Mgi Id  MGI:7448286 Doi  10.1016/j.cmet.2023.02.001
Citation  Benjamin DI, et al. (2023) Multiomics reveals glutathione metabolism as a driver of bimodality during stem cell aging. Cell Metab 35(3):472-486.e6
abstractText  With age, skeletal muscle stem cells (MuSCs) activate out of quiescence more slowly and with increased death, leading to defective muscle repair. To explore the molecular underpinnings of these defects, we combined multiomics, single-cell measurements, and functional testing of MuSCs from young and old mice. The multiomics approach allowed us to assess which changes are causal, which are compensatory, and which are simply correlative. We identified glutathione (GSH) metabolism as perturbed in old MuSCs, with both causal and compensatory components. Contrary to young MuSCs, old MuSCs exhibit a population dichotomy composed of GSH(high) cells (comparable with young MuSCs) and GSH(low) cells with impaired functionality. Mechanistically, we show that antagonism between NRF2 and NF-kappaB maintains this bimodality. Experimental manipulation of GSH levels altered the functional dichotomy of aged MuSCs. These findings identify a novel mechanism of stem cell aging and highlight glutathione metabolism as an accessible target for reversing MuSC aging.
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