Our goal for the proposed grant period is to ascertain whether oxygen free radical-induced damage accumulates in DNA during aging, and whether capacity to repair this damage diminishes with age. During the previous grant period, we identified lesions in DNA, i.e., characteristic chemical modifications and mutations, that provide specific markers for genomic alterations caused by oxygen free radicals. We have three specific aims. Having established that CC->TT tandem substitutions are produced in bacteria exposed to oxygen free radicals, we will utilize a new PCR-based assay to quantitate the frequency of CC->TT mutations in mammalian cells and tissues. Having documented that 5-hydroxy 2'-deoxycytidine is produced by oxygen free radicals and is highly mutagenic in bacteria, we will measure the content, repair and mutagenicity of this adduct in mammalian cells. Having introduced a flow cytometric assay to measure DNA damage during the cell cycle, we will utilize this assay to quantitate oxygen- mediated DNA damage and repair in cells and tissues. We will obtain tissue from mice (ages 6-8, 16-18 and over 24 months), as well as kidney and lymphocytes from human subjects of various ages. We will also utilize lymphoblast cell lines from patients with Fanconi's anemia which are uniquely sensitive to oxygen damage. These model systems are established in the laboratories that constitute this program project grant. We will also obtain tissue from transgenic mice that overexpress human catalase alone or both human SOD-1 and catalase, and from avian tissue as it becomes available from project 1. We will utilize the three assays mentioned in the specific aims to examine these model systems. Our observations will allow us to assess the accumulation of oxidative damage to DNA as a function of age and oxidative state in three species.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01AG001751-22
Application #
6345875
Study Section
Project Start
2000-09-01
Project End
2002-07-31
Budget Start
1997-10-01
Budget End
1998-09-30
Support Year
22
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$158,867
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Washington
Department
Type
DUNS #
135646524
City
Seattle
State
WA
Country
United States
Zip Code
98195
Basisty, Nathan B; Liu, Yuxin; Reynolds, Jason et al. (2018) Stable Isotope Labeling Reveals Novel Insights Into Ubiquitin-Mediated Protein Aggregation With Age, Calorie Restriction, and Rapamycin Treatment. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 73:561-570
Kramer, Philip A; Duan, Jicheng; Gaffrey, Matthew J et al. (2018) Fatiguing contractions increase protein S-glutathionylation occupancy in mouse skeletal muscle. Redox Biol 17:367-376
Zhang, Huiliang; Gong, Guohua; Wang, Pei et al. (2018) Heart specific knockout of Ndufs4 ameliorates ischemia reperfusion injury. J Mol Cell Cardiol 123:38-45
Ge, Xuan; Ciol, Marcia A; Pettan-Brewer, Christina et al. (2017) Self-motivated and stress-response performance assays in mice are age-dependent. Exp Gerontol 91:1-4
Sweetwyne, Mariya T; Pippin, Jeffrey W; Eng, Diana G et al. (2017) The mitochondrial-targeted peptide, SS-31, improves glomerular architecture in mice of advanced age. Kidney Int 91:1126-1145
Liu, Sophia Z; Marcinek, David J (2017) Skeletal muscle bioenergetics in aging and heart failure. Heart Fail Rev 22:167-178
Chiao, Ying Ann; Kolwicz, Stephen C; Basisty, Nathan et al. (2016) Rapamycin transiently induces mitochondrial remodeling to reprogram energy metabolism in old hearts. Aging (Albany NY) 8:314-27
Campbell, Matthew D; Marcinek, David J (2016) Evaluation of in vivo mitochondrial bioenergetics in skeletal muscle using NMR and optical methods. Biochim Biophys Acta 1862:716-724
Basisty, Nathan; Dai, Dao-Fu; Gagnidze, Arni et al. (2016) Mitochondrial-targeted catalase is good for the old mouse proteome, but not for the young: 'reverse' antagonistic pleiotropy? Aging Cell 15:634-45
Treuting, P M; Snyder, J M; Ikeno, Y et al. (2016) The Vital Role of Pathology in Improving Reproducibility and Translational Relevance of Aging Studies in Rodents. Vet Pathol 53:244-9

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