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Endogenous Metabolite Promotes Multiple Tissue Regeneration and Delays Aging

Feb 07, 2022

Researchers from the Institute of Zoology and Beijing Institute of Genomics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences have collaborated to identify uridine as a pro-regenerative metabolite that promoted human stem cell activity and enhanced regeneration and tissue repair in multiple tissues in mammals. This study was published online in Cell Discovery on February 1.

Regeneration is an important process of rejuvenating or replacing damaged, diseased, or aged tissues. Regenerative capacity declines with evolution and age, but the molecular mechanism underlying the declined regenerative capacity remains poorly understood. Unlike proteins that are biomacromolecules, the structure of metabolites is relatively similar between species, which makes metabolism an ideal research area for studying evolutionarily conserved biology. Yet, little is known about the small-molecule metabolites that potentially regulate aging and regeneration processes.

In this study, by combining metabolomics and transcriptomics approaches, the researchers revealed several cross-species and cross-ages metabolic programs associated with higher regenerative capacity, i.e., polyamine metabolism, pyrimidine metabolism (uracil containing), and fatty acid metabolism pathways.

Combined with the human stem cell aging research system, the researchers conducted screening for natural metabolite candidates with regeneration-promoting potentials and identified that uridine counteracted cellular senescence in both physiologically and pathologically senescent cells.

They found that uridine supplementation promoted regeneration or repair of various tissues in vivo, including skeletal muscle, heart, liver, skin, and articular cartilage. Specifically, in the muscle injury model, uridine effectively improved muscle regeneration and repair, alleviated the inflammatory response, and endowed uridine-treated mice with higher grip strength and locomotive activity.

In the myocardial infarction model, uridine ameliorated acute inflammation and improved the contractility of the injured heart. In the liver fibrosis model, uridine alleviated carbon tetrachloride-induced liver fibrosis and restored the liver function. In the hair regeneration model, uridine induced anagen hair growth. In the arthritis model, uridine promoted the regeneration of articular cartilage and improved grip strength and locomotive activity of mice.

In addition, they also found that uridine was more abundant in the plasma from young individuals than that from old individuals. Additionally, oral uridine supplementation improved the physical activities of physiologically aged mice.

Taken together, the researchers proved that the supplementation of single metabolite uridine alleviated stem cell senescence, promoted tissue regeneration and repair, and improved the physical activities of aged mice.

This study provides previously unknown metabolism-associated regeneration principles across species and opens new avenues for metabolic intervention in tissue repair, regeneration, and aging.

 

Identification of key metabolic small molecules that promote multi-tissue repair and delay aging through cross-species and cross-age metabolome profiling. (Image by IOZ)

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LIU Guanghui

Institute of Zoology

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Cross-species metabolomic analysis identifies uridine as a potent regeneration promoting factor

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