Genes’ Cycles Change with Age

As the rhythmic expression of many genes falls out of sync in older human brains, a subset of transcripts gain rhythmicity with age.

Written byKerry Grens
| 1 min read

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PIXABAY, HOLDENTRILSCircadian cycles shift as humans get older—sleep and body temperature patterns change, for instance. The rhythmic cycling of numerous genes’ expression in the brain also shifts as people age, researchers reported this week (December 21) in PNAS. The levels of many transcripts became less robust in their daily ups and downs, while another set of mRNAs emerged with a rhythmicity not seen in younger counterparts.

“You can imagine that things actually get weaker with age, but that things can get stronger with age is really exciting,” Doris Kretzschmar, a neuroscientist at the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health Sciences who was not involved in the study, told NPR’s Shots.

The researchers, led by Colleen McClung at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine in Pennsylvania, collected cortical tissue from people whose hour of death was known. Comparing gene expression levels between 31 subjects under 40 years old and 37 subjects over age 60, the researchers found 1,063 transcripts in one part of the prefrontal cortex that lost rhythmicity altogether in the older group. In this same part of the brain, 434 genes gained a rhythm that was not seen among younger ...

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  • kerry grens

    Kerry served as The Scientist’s news director until 2021. Before joining The Scientist in 2013, she was a stringer for Reuters Health, the senior health and science reporter at WHYY in Philadelphia, and the health and science reporter at New Hampshire Public Radio. Kerry got her start in journalism as a AAAS Mass Media fellow at KUNC in Colorado. She has a master’s in biological sciences from Stanford University and a biology degree from Loyola University Chicago.

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