Back to Search Start Over

TIME-seq reduces time and cost of DNA methylation measurement for epigenetic clock construction.

Authors :
Griffin PT
Kane AE
Trapp A
Li J
Arnold M
Poganik JR
Conway RJ
McNamara MS
Meer MV
Hoffman N
Amorim JA
Tian X
MacArthur MR
Mitchell SJ
Mueller AL
Carmody C
Vera DL
Kerepesi C
Ying K
Noren Hooten N
Mitchell JR
Evans MK
Gladyshev VN
Sinclair DA
Source :
Nature aging [Nat Aging] 2024 Feb; Vol. 4 (2), pp. 261-274. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jan 10.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Epigenetic 'clocks' based on DNA methylation have emerged as the most robust and widely used aging biomarkers, but conventional methods for applying them are expensive and laborious. Here we develop tagmentation-based indexing for methylation sequencing (TIME-seq), a highly multiplexed and scalable method for low-cost epigenetic clocks. Using TIME-seq, we applied multi-tissue and tissue-specific epigenetic clocks in over 1,800 mouse DNA samples from eight tissue and cell types. We show that TIME-seq clocks are accurate and robust, enriched for polycomb repressive complex 2-regulated loci, and benchmark favorably against conventional methods despite being up to 100-fold less expensive. Using dietary treatments and gene therapy, we find that TIME-seq clocks reflect diverse interventions in multiple tissues. Finally, we develop an economical human blood clock (R > 0.96, median error = 3.39 years) in 1,056 demographically representative individuals. These methods will enable more efficient epigenetic clock measurement in larger-scale human and animal studies.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2662-8465
Volume :
4
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature aging
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38200273
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43587-023-00555-2