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Tissue-specific divergence in sex-biased DNA methylation across the lifespan

Abeysooriya, M. D.; Hiam, D.; Voisin, S.; Eynon, N.; Ziemann, M.; Lamon, S.

2026-04-21 genetics
10.64898/2026.04.16.719093 bioRxiv
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BackgroundAgeing is a sex-specific process characterised by a progressive decline in physiological integrity. DNA methylation represents a primary epigenetic hallmark of ageing, yet sex-specific patterns of epigenetic ageing within and across tissues remain poorly understood. This study aims to address these gaps through an integrated analysis of sex-moderated epigenetic ageing across eight human tissues. MethodsA total of 137 DNA methylation datasets comprising over 36,000 individuals aged 10-114 years were analysed using a meta-analytic workflow to identify age-associated differentially methylated positions (aDMPs) and regions (aDMRs), meta-regression to assess sex moderation, and pathway enrichment analyses to interpret functional relevance. FindingsIndividual tissues displayed distinct age-related methylation trajectories, but some DMP sites showed consistent hyper- or hypomethylation across tissues. Across tissues, we identified 68,630 aDMPs (10%) robustly associated with ageing. Age-associated changes at the regional level were less common, with only 80 robust age-associated aDMRs detected across tissues, representing 0.09% of analysed regions. Sex moderation was observed for only 16 aDMPs (0.002%), indicating that sex effects on age-associated DNA methylation are largely tissue-specific rather than shared across tissues. InterpretationOur findings indicate that age-associated DNA methylation changes predominantly occur at isolated CpG sites rather than extended genomic regions and are strongly dependent on tissue and genomic context. The minimal overlap of sex-moderated methylation signals across tissues suggests that age-related sex differences at the epigenetic level are more likely attributable to tissue- and cell-type-specific variation rather than to broadly conserved epigenetic mechanisms shared across tissues. FundingThis study was funded by an Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery project (DP200101830). Severine Lamon was funded by an ARC Future Fellowship (FT210100278). Nir Eynon was funded by NHMRC Investigator Grant (APP1194159), and a Hevolution/AFAR New Investigator Award in Aging Biology and Geroscience Research. Mandhri D. Abeysooryia was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship. Research in context Evidence before this studyDNA methylation is widely recognised as a central epigenetic hallmark of ageing. Previous research has demonstrated that some age-related methylation changes are conserved across tissues, forming the basis of pan-tissue epigenetic clocks. Most studies to date have primarily examined age effects in isolation. Although biological sex influences ageing trajectories and susceptibility to nearly all age-related diseases, sex-moderated epigenetic ageing has received limited investigation. Specifically, pan-tissue clocks, including GrimAge and PhenoAge, are "sex-aware" but were trained and validated in mixed-sex cohorts, limiting their capacity to disentangle tissue-specific sex effects. Consequently, it remains unclear whether sex-moderated epigenetic ageing signals are shared across tissues or are tissue-specific. Added value of this studyThis study provides a large-scale, comprehensive multi-tissue analysis of sex-moderated epigenetic ageing, integrating 137 DNA methylation datasets across eight human tissues and more than 36,000 male and female individuals spanning the lifespan. Our findings show that while age-associated methylation changes are widespread at the CpG level, sex-moderated effects are rare and largely tissue-specific, with minimal overlap across tissues. Implications of all the available evidenceTogether, the available evidence indicates that epigenetic ageing is predominantly driven by shared, conserved age-related methylation changes, whereas sex differences in epigenetic ageing are modest and context dependent. These sex-related effects are more likely to reflect tissue- and cell-type-specific variation rather than widespread, shared mechanisms. This underscores the need to develop sex-specific epigenetic clocks and to conduct longitudinal cohort and intervention studies to more precisely characterise sex-specific dynamics of epigenetic ageing across tissues.

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