Androgen signaling stabilizes genomes to counteract senescence by promoting XRCC4 transcription

Author:

Chen Yu12ORCID,Zhen Zhengyi12,Chen Lingjiang12,Wang Hao12,Wang Xuhui12,Sun Xiaoxiang12,Song Zhiwei12,Wang Haiyan12,Lin Yizi1ORCID,Zhang Wenjun3,Wu Guizhu4,Jiang Ying1,Mao Zhiyong2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Yangzhi Rehabilitation Hospital (Shanghai Sunshine Rehabilitation Center), Shanghai Key Laboratory of Signaling and Disease Research, School of Life Sciences and Technology Tongji University Shanghai China

2. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Maternal Fetal Medicine, Clinical and Translational Research Center of Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital, Frontier Science Center for Stem Cell Research, School of Life Sciences and Technology Tongji University Shanghai China

3. Department of Plastic Surgery Changzheng Hospital Shanghai China

4. Department of Gynecology, Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital Shanghai Tongji University School of Medicine Shanghai China

Abstract

AbstractAging is accompanied by a decreased DNA repair capacity, which might contribute to age‐associated functional decline in multiple tissues. Disruption in hormone signaling, associated with reproductive organ dysfunction, is an early event of age‐related tissue degeneration, but whether it impacts DNA repair in nonreproductive organs remains elusive. Using skin fibroblasts derived from healthy donors with a broad age range, we show here that the downregulation of expression of XRCC4, a factor involved in nonhomologous end‐joining (NHEJ) repair, which is the dominant pathway to repair somatic double‐strand breaks, is mediated through transcriptional mechanisms. We show that the androgen receptor (AR), whose expression is also reduced during aging, directly binds to and enhances the activity of the XRCC4 promoter, facilitating XRCC4 transcription and thus stabilizing the genome. We also demonstrate that dihydrotestosterone (DHT), a powerful AR agonist, restores XRCC4 expression and stabilizes the genome in different models of cellular aging. Moreover, DHT treatment reverses senescence‐associated phenotypes, opening a potential avenue to aging interventions in the future.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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