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The researchers Alejo Rodríguez-Fraticelli, from IRB Barcelona, and Lars Velten, from the Cente for Genomic Regulation (CRG). Photo: IRB / Albert Armengol
 22.05.2025

Researchers at IRB Barcelona and the CRG identify ‘barcodes’ written in our DNA that reveal how our blood ages

A team of scientists from the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona), based at the Barcelona Science Park, and the Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG) has identified natural methylation patterns that reveal changes in the blood detectable from the age of 50, and which become almost universal after age 60. This discovery, published in the journal Nature, could pave the way for new strategies to detect early signs of unhealthy aging long before symptoms appear, potentially helping to prevent diseases such as myeloid leukemia, cardiovascular conditions, and immune disorders. It also opens the door to exploring the feasibility of therapies to slow down aging in humans—an area that, until now, has mostly focused on animal models.

As we age, the blood system deteriorates: the balance between the stem cells that sustain it becomes disrupted, altering the production of blood cells and increasing vulnerability to disease. In both humans and mice, a few stem cells, or “clones”, outcompete their neighbours and gradually take over blood production. The blood stem cell reservoir shrinks and becomes dominated by clones which show a preference for producing myeloid cells, immune cells linked to chronic inflammation.

According to this new study, the changes were detectable by age 50 and almost universal after age 60. The authors of the study suspect the loss of clone diversity could help explain “inflammaging”, the persistent chronic inflammation that emerges during ageing and which can make us more vulnerable to disease. The team observed the pattern in both mice and humans, suggesting the findings are a fundamental feature of blood ageing across species.

“Our blood stem cells compete for survival. In youth, this competition produces a rich, diverse ecosystem while in old age, some drop out entirely. A few stem cells take over, and these work extra hard to compensate. This reduces diversity, which is bad for the blood system’s resilience. Diverse stem cells can respond to different stresses, so the dominance of a handful of clones makes the whole system more fragile”, says Dr. Lars Velten, Group Leader at the Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG) in Barcelona and co-corresponding author of the study.

Epimutations: The natural barcodes of DNA

The scientists had to solve a long-standing technical challenge to make their discovery. In youth, humans have between 50,000 to 200,000 active blood stem cells which create between 100 to 200 billion new blood cells every day. Tracking every blood cell back to its original stem cell requires genetically modifying DNA. Until now, this has only been possible in animal research. In humans, this type of genetic engineering is neither practical nor ethical.

Instead, the team turned to epimutations. These are epigenetic changes in the chemical tags, also known as methylation marks, attached to DNA. The tags help cells know which genes to switch on or off. When a stem cell divides, methylation marks are copied to its daughter cells, leaving behind a permanent, natural ‘barcode’ that researchers can ‘scan’ or read to chart each cell’s position in the family tree.

“Our cells carry genetic alterations which collectively make us unique individuals. But we’re also a mosaic of epigenetic alterations. Groups of cells, even if they end up doing different jobs, carry shared methylation marks which tie them back to a common ancestor stem cell. We’ve been finally able to construct the epigenetic family tree by reading information written directly into the DNA of each cell”, says Dr. Alejo Rodriguez-Fraticelli, co-corresponding author of the study and Group Leader at IRB Barcelona.

EPI-Clone: Reconstructing the history of blood, cell by cell

The researchers developed a new technique called EPI-Clone which reads methylation barcodes from individual cells. It was built modifying Mission Bio’s single-cell sequencing platform Tapestri. They used it to reconstruct the history of blood production in both mice and humans, helping trace which stem cells contributed to making blood, and which had dropped out of the race over time.

“DNA methylation works like a kind of binary code. At each position in the genome, a site is either methylated or not, like a 1 or a 0”, explains Dr. Michael Scherer, bioinformatician and co-first author of the study who led the work at the CRG and is now group leader at the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ). “This simple on-off information can be transformed into a natural barcode, one that each stem cell passes on to its descendants. Five years ago, I wouldn’t have thought this possible at single-cell resolution, across tens of thousands of cells. It’s been a huge leap forward in technology”, he adds.

Stem cell diversity over time

In young blood, thousands of different stem cells contributed to a rich and diverse pool of red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets. But EPI-Clone revealed that in older mice, up to 70 percent of blood stem cells belonged to just a few dozen large clones. The picture is similar in humans, though the exact percentage varied between the dozen healthy donors between 35 and 70 years old which formed part of the study. The study found that by age 50, many blood stems cells begin to drop out and larger clones begin to take over, while by age 60 and beyond, the shift becomes even more pronounced.

“The change from diversity to dominance isn’t random but clock-like”, says Dr. Indranil Singh, co-first author of the study who carried out the work at IRB Barcelona and is currently at the Broad Institute in the United States. “By age 50, you can already see it starting, and after 60 it becomes almost inevitable”.

Clinical implications and rejuvenation therapies

The study also found that some large clones harboured mutations linked to clonal haematopoiesis (CH), a process where some blood stem cells acquire mutations that allow them to grow and multiply faster than others. The phenomenon becomes more common with age and has been shown to increase the risk of heart disease, stroke, and leukaemia. However, many of the dominant clones identified by EPI-Clone had no known mutations at all, suggesting that clonal expansion is a general feature of ageing blood, not just a sign of cancer risk.

The findings mean clinicians could one day assess clonal behaviour itself for early detection, offering doctors a way to monitor how a person’s blood stem cell pool is ageing years before any disease develops. People with faster loss of diversity, or rapid expansion of risky clones, could be flagged for preventive care.

The study also observed that in both older humans and mice, many of the dominant clones show a preference for producing myeloid cells. These are immune cells linked to chronic inflammation. Previous studies in mice have shown that selectively removing myeloid-biased stem cells can restore a younger profile of blood stem cells, boosting the production of infection-fighting lymphocytes and improving immune responses. But to study rejuvenation therapies in humans, researchers would first need to identify which clones are problematic, something which has not been possible until now. EPI-Clone is suited for clinical research because it works with naturally-occurring barcodes rather than artificial labels which require genetic modification. “If we want to move beyond generic anti-ageing treatments and into real precision medicine for ageing, this is exactly the kind of tool we need”, says Dr. Velten. “We can’t fix what we can’t see and for the first time, EPI-Clone can facilitate this for humans”.

“We have only shown what’s possible”, concludes Dr. Rodriguez-Fraticelli. “Now the goal is to refine EPI-Clone so it can boost clinical research efforts”.

The research has been funded by the European Haematology Association, the European Research Council, the Spanish Association Against Cancer (AECC), CRIS Cancer Foundation, the “la Caixa” Foundation, the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology and the Government of Catalonia.

» Link to the news: IRB Barcelona website [+]

» Article of referencia: Clonal tracing with somatic epimutations reveals dynamics of blood ageing. Michael Scherer*, Indranil Singh*, Martina Maria Braun*, Chelsea Szu-Tu*, Pedro Sanchez Sanchez, Dominik Lindenhofer, Nils Asger Jakobsen, Verena Körber, Michael Kardorff, Lena Nitsch, Pauline Kautz, Julia Rühle, Agostina Bianchi, Luca Cozzuto, Robert Frömel, Sergi Beneyto-Calabuig, Caleb Lareau, Ansuman Satpathy, Renée Beekman, Lars M. Steinmetz, Simon Raffel, Leif S. Ludwig, Paresh Vyas, Alejo Rodriguez-Fraticelli@, Lars Velten@. Nature (2025) doi: 10.1038/s41586-025-09041-8