Human fibroblasts from aged individuals exhibit chromosomal instability through replication stress caused by oxidative stress

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Abstract

Aneuploid cells are known to increase with age. Previously, we demonstrated that aneuploid cells increase in fibroblasts from aged mice due to chromosomal instability (CIN), which is caused by oxidative stress. It is unclear whether this phenomenon also occurs in human cells, which are more resistant to oxidative stress than mouse cells. Here, we found that fibroblasts from aged individuals exhibited an increase in aneuploid cells. The frequency of chromosome missegregation and micronuclei increased in these cells, indicating CIN. A DNA fiber assay revealed the presence of replication stress, accompanied by an increase in 53BP1 nuclear bodies and ultrafine bridges. Increased levels of reactive oxygen species derived from mitochondria, along with reduced mitochondrial membrane potential, imply that these cells experienced oxidative stress due to mitochondrial functional decline. Antioxidant treatment reduced the frequency of chromosome missegregation and micronuclei, suggesting that oxidative stress causes CIN. Oxidative stress also causes replication stress, which precedes CIN. Spindle microtubules were stabilized in fibroblasts from aged individuals, which was alleviated by antioxidant treatment. Taken together, these findings suggest that aging-related CIN in human fibroblasts is caused by oxidative stress associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, which induces replication stress that in turn causes CIN through microtubule stabilization. Although human fibroblasts are more resistant to the ambient oxygen environment than mouse fibroblasts, our findings showed that they undergo oxidative stress that causes CIN with age in a manner similar to mouse fibroblasts, revealing a conserved phenomenon in mammalian cells.

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