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Supercharged mitochondria spark aging-related blood disorders

Media Release | April 16, 20252025_PR_04Apr_TrowbridgeDnmt3a_LRes

JAX scientists not only uncover how an energy boost from mitochondria fuels blood disorders, but also how to shut it down.

(Bar Harbor, Maine – April 16, 2025) - As we age, blood stem cells, the essential source of new blood cells in the body, can accumulate genetic mutations. These mutations can give the cells a growth advantage, laying the foundation for developing serious health conditions. Now, scientists at The Jackson Laboratory (JAX) have not only discovered the mechanism that fuels their unchecked growth but have also found a way to stop it.

Led by Jennifer Trowbridge, professor and The Dattels Family Chair at JAX, the study reported today in the April 16 issue of Nature Communications reveals that a common aging-associated mutation in the gene Dnmt3a boosts the power-generating function of mitochondria in blood stem cells. This mutation allows the cells to make copies of themselves more readily than normal and creates fertile ground for the development of clonal hematopoiesis, a condition that dramatically increases the risk of heart disease, blood cancers, and other illnesses.

Although clonal hematopoiesis develops silently with age — more than half of all 80-year-olds are estimated to be affected by the condition — the mutated blood stem cells can produce inflammatory molecules that disrupt blood production and weaken the immune system.

“This work gives us a new window into how and why blood stem cells change with age and how that sets up an increased risk of diseases like cancer, diabetes, and heart disease,” said Trowbridge. “It also points toward a new opportunity to intervene and potentially prevent age-associated conditions not only in the blood but everywhere the blood touches.”
A common genetic mutation

Building on her previous work and that of others, Trowbridge’s team knew that Dnmt3a is frequently mutated in blood stem cells with aging as well as in blood cancers. To investigate why cells with this mutation gain a competitive advantage over normal cells, the team developed a mouse model carrying the Dnmt3a mutation.

In this new study, the team discovered that in middle-aged mice, the mutated stem cells had double the energy-producing capacity of normal cells. The mutated stem cells also contained turbocharged mitochondria, which gave the cells a strong competitive growth advantage.

“This was really unexpected,” Trowbridge said. “This gene was not previously known to impact metabolism or mitochondria.”

Targeting mitochondria

The researchers realized that because the stem cells with Dnmt3a mutations relied so heavily on their overactive mitochondria to support their growth, the mitochondria might be an Achilles heel for the mutated cells. In isolated stem cells and mice with Dnmt3a mutations, the team tested the effect of MitoQ and d-TPP – molecules that disrupt the normal function of mitochondria and prevent them from producing energy. In a separate paper co-published today in Nature, Trowbridge and co-authors report that metformin—a first-line treatment for type 2 diabetes—also diminishes the competitive advantage of stem cells carrying the Dnmt3a mutation.

In mice with Dnmt3a mutations and clonal hematopoiesis, the mitochondria-targeting drugs had drastic effects. Within a few days of treatment, about half of all mutant cells died and among remaining mutant cells, their energy production dropped to normal levels. Normal cells – which don’t rely as heavily on the same metabolic pathway – were not impacted.

“Seeing this selective vulnerability where mutated cells were weakened, but normal stem cells are fine, was really exciting,” said Trowbridge.

Hope for human disease

The mitochondrial drugs worked not only in mice with clonal hematopoiesis, but in human blood stem cells engineered to have the DNMT3A gene mutation. The results suggest that the strategy could work in treating humans with the condition to prevent blood cancers and other age-related illnesses.

However, more work is needed to understand whether these drugs would be effective at targeting other mutations observed in clonal hematopoiesis and the effect of the drugs on cells.

About The Jackson Laboratory

The Jackson Laboratory (JAX) is an independent, nonprofit biomedical research institution with a National Cancer Institute-designated Cancer Center. JAX leverages a unique combination of research, education, and resources to achieve its bold mission: to discover precise genomic solutions for disease and empower the global biomedical community in the shared quest to improve human health. Established in Bar Harbor, Maine in 1929, JAX is a global organization with nearly 3,000 employees worldwide and campuses and facilities in Maine, Connecticut, California, Florida, and Japan. For more information, please visit www.jax.org.

JAX media contact: Cara McDonough, [email protected], 919-696-3854

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