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Nucleic Acids Research Advance Access first published online on November 6, 2007
This version published online on December 11, 2007

Nucleic Acids Research, doi:10.1093/nar/gkm919
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© 2007 The Author(s)
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


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Yeast mother cell-specific ageing, genetic (in)stability, and the somatic mutation theory of ageing

Peter Laun1,*, Carlo V. Bruschi2, J. Richard Dickinson3, Mark Rinnerthaler1, Gino Heeren1, Richard Schwimbersky1, Raphaela Rid1 and Michael Breitenbach1

1Department of Cell Biology, Division of Genetics, University of Salzburg, Austria, 2Yeast Molecular Genetics Group, ICGEB, Trieste, Italy and 3Cardiff School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK

*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +43 662 8044 5783; Fax: +43 662 8044 144; Email: Peter.Laun{at}sbg.ac.at

Received August 16, 2007. Revised October 8, 2007. Accepted October 8, 2007.

Yeast mother cell-specific ageing is characterized by a limited capacity to produce daughter cells. The replicative lifespan is determined by the number of cell cycles a mother cell has undergone, not by calendar time, and in a population of cells its distribution follows the Gompertz law. Daughter cells reset their clock to zero and enjoy the full lifespan characteristic for the strain. This kind of replicative ageing of a cell population based on asymmetric cell divisions is investigated as a model for the ageing of a stem cell population in higher organisms. The simple fact that the daughter cells can reset their clock to zero precludes the accumulation of chromosomal mutations as the cause of ageing, because semiconservative replication would lead to the same mutations in the daughters. However, nature is more complicated than that because, (i) the very last daughters of old mothers do not reset the clock; and (ii) mutations in mitochondrial DNA could play a role in ageing due to the large copy number in the cell and a possible asymmetric distribution of damaged mitochondrial DNA between mother and daughter cell. Investigation of the loss of heterozygosity in diploid cells at the end of their mother cell-specific lifespan has shown that genomic rearrangements do occur in old mother cells. However, it is not clear if this kind of genomic instability is causative for the ageing process. Damaged material other than DNA, for instance misfolded, oxidized or otherwise damaged proteins, seem to play a major role in ageing, depending on the balance between production and removal through various repair processes, for instance several kinds of proteolysis and autophagy. We are reviewing here the evidence for genetic change and its causality in the mother cell-specific ageing process of yeast.


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