Mechanism: Molecular damage (oxidative stress, AGEs, mitochondrial mutations) increases cellular entropy, which ATM/ATR kinases integrate to drive telomere shortening in c-Kit+ CPCs. Readout: Readout: N-acetylcysteine treatment reduces the 'Damage Entropy Score' from 95% to 20%, preserving telomere length despite identical cell division counts.
Hypothesis
Telomere length in c-Kit⁺ cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) does not merely count divisions; it integrates the heterogeneous burden of molecular damage—oxidative lesions, AGEs, mitochondrial mutations—into a single metric that reflects the informational entropy of the cell’s stress landscape.
Rationale
Recent work shows telomere attrition in cardiomyocytes can arise independently of replication via oxidative stress and telomeric protein loss [1, 2]. In low‑proliferative CPCs, this damage‑driven shortening correlates with senescence and loss of regenerative capacity. If telomeres act as a sensor that sums diverse insults, then cells with identical division histories but different damage profiles should display divergent telomere lengths that parallel the heterogeneity of their molecular damage.
We propose to quantify this heterogeneity using Shannon entropy applied to single‑cell multi‑omics data (transcriptome, proteome, and metabolome) and test whether telomere length predicts entropy scores across individual CPCs.
Experimental Design
- Isolate c-Kit⁺ CPCs from young and aged mouse hearts; culture subsets under (a) low‑serum, hypoxic conditions to minimize replication, (b) oxidative stress (H₂O₂) to induce damage without division, and (c) proliferative stimulation (FGF2 + IGF2) to increase division count.
- Measure telomere length per cell using quantitative fluorescence in situ hybridization (Q‑FISH) combined with flow‑FISH to obtain single‑cell telomere intensity distributions.
- Generate single‑cell multi‑omics profiles (scRNA‑seq + scATAC‑seq + targeted metabolomics) from the same cells.
- Compute Shannon entropy for each cell:
- Transcriptomic entropy: –∑ pᵢ log pᵢ over expressed genes.
- Proteomic/metabolomic entropy analogously.
- Combine into a composite damage‑entropy score.
- Statistical analysis: Fit linear mixed‑effects models with telomere length as the dependent variable, entropy score, division count (estimated via Ki‑67 or EdU incorporation), and treatment group as fixed effects; mouse ID as random effect.
Predictions
- Primary prediction: After accounting for division count, entropy score will explain a significant proportion of telomere length variance (β > 0, p < 0.01). Cells with high entropy but low division will show telomere shortening comparable to highly proliferative, low‑entropy cells.
- Secondary prediction: Antioxidant treatment (N‑acetylcysteine) will reduce entropy scores without altering division rate, leading to telomere length preservation relative to untreated stressed CPCs.
- Falsification: If telomere length remains tightly coupled only to division count and shows no residual correlation with entropy after controlling for proliferation, the hypothesis is refuted.
Mechanistic Insight
We speculate that telomeric chromatin acts as a damage integrator: oxidative lesions recruit ATM/ATR kinases that phosphorylate telomere‑binding proteins (TRF2, POT1), altering t‑loop stability and promoting exonuclease‑mediated trimming. Simultaneously, heterogeneous stress signals remodel nucleosome positioning and TERRA transcription, creating a feedback loop where the telomere repeat array mirrors the cell’s overall noise burden. Thus, telomere length becomes a thermodynamic readout of the information entropy generated by stochastic molecular damage.
Implications
Validating this view would shift the telomere paradigm from a mitotic clock to a bio‑sensor of cellular disorder, offering a unified explanation for why senescent phenotypes appear in both highly proliferative and quiescent tissues. It also opens therapeutic avenues: targeting damage heterogeneity (e.g., via proteostasis enhancers) could decouple entropy from telomere attrition, preserving progenitor function without forcing cells to re‑enter the cell cycle.
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