Age-dependent relaxation of gene repression: Increase of endogenous murine leukemia virus-related and globin-related RNA in brain and liver of mice

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A progressive loss in the ability of cells to maintain their normal specialized states of differentiation could be the common denominator underlying much of the physiology and pathology associated with the mammalian aging process. We investigated this possibility by searching for an age-dependent derepression of endogenous genes in tissues in which they are not normally expected to be expressed. Complementary DNA (cDNA) probes to globin genes and to the murine leukemia type C RNA virus (MuLV) genome were used to detect the presence of RNA complementary to these genes in RNA extracted from brain and liver in young and old mice. Significant amounts of globin RNA were found in brain nuclei and cytoplasm. No age difference was found in the globin RNA sequences present, but the number of globin RNA molecules increased from about 15 in 6-month to 34 in 27-month-old animals for nuclei and 280 in 6-month to 500 in 27-month-old animals for cytoplasm. Similar results were found for liver. RNA complementary to the MuLV cDNA probe was also found but, in contrast to globin, the different RNA sequences increased in both brain and liver nuclei from about 45% of the MuLV genome in 6-month to 72% in 27-month-old animals. The number of MuLV-related RNA molecules remained constant at about 22 and 38 per nuclei for brain and liver, respectively. Derepression of genes of this magnitude could result in a time-dependent increase in virus-related diseases and a general deterioration of the organism.

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