Open Access
Open access
Aging Cell, volume 23, issue 5

Transcriptomic and intervention evidence reveals domestic dogs as a promising model for anti‐inflammatory investigation

Min Zeng 1, 2
Tong Zhou 1
Zhiyu Li 3
Guimei Li 1
Shurun Zhang 1
Lu Wang 3
Qing-Guo Huang 4
Ju-Dong Li 4
P. Nadeeshika Samarawickrama 1, 2, 5
Yonghan He 1, 2, 5
Guo Dong Wang 1, 2, 6
Show full list: 11 authors
4
 
Kunming Police Dog Base of the Chinese Ministry of Public Security Kunming China
5
 
Key Laboratory of Healthy Aging Research of Yunnan Province Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming China
6
 
Yunnan Key Laboratory of Molecular Biology of Domestic Animals Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming China
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-03-01
Journal: Aging Cell
scimago Q1
SJR2.904
CiteScore14.4
Impact factor8
ISSN14749718, 14749726
Cell Biology
Aging
Abstract

Domestic dogs have great potential to expand our understanding of the determinants of aging. To understand the aging pattern of domestic dogs and evaluate whether they can be used as an aging model, we performed RNA sequencing on white blood cells from domestic dogs aged 1–9 years and treated aged dogs with classical antiaging approaches. We obtained 30 RNA sequencing libraries and identified 61 age‐associated genes with dynamic changes, the majority of which were related to metabolism and immune function, which may be predominant biomarkers for aging in dogs. We next treated aged dogs with canine mesenchymal stem cells (cMSCs), nicotinamide mononucleotide, and rapamycin to determine whether and how they responded to the antiaging interventions. The results showed that these treatments can significantly reduce the level of inflammatory factors (IL‐6 and TNF‐α). MSCs effectively improved the heart functions of aged dogs. Three key potential age‐related genes (PYCR1, CCRL2, and TOX) were reversed by MSC treatment, two of which (CCRL2 and TOX) are implicated in immunity. Overall, we profiled the transcriptomic pattern of domestic dogs and revealed that they may be a good model of aging, especially in anti‐inflammatory investigations.

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