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Meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity

Despite evidence from family studies that there is a strong genetic influence upon exceptional longevity, relatively few genetic variants have been associated with this trait. One reason could be that many genes individually have such weak effects that they cannot meet standard thresholds of genome...

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Autores principales: Sebastiani, Paola, Bae1, Harold, Sun, Fangui X., Andersen, Stacy L., Daw, E. Warwick, Malovini, Alberto, Kojima, Toshio, Hirose, Nobuyoshi, Schupf, Nicole, Puca, Annibale, Perls, Thomas T
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3808698/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24244950
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author Sebastiani, Paola
Bae1, Harold
Sun, Fangui X.
Andersen, Stacy L.
Daw, E. Warwick
Malovini, Alberto
Kojima, Toshio
Hirose, Nobuyoshi
Schupf, Nicole
Puca, Annibale
Perls, Thomas T
author_facet Sebastiani, Paola
Bae1, Harold
Sun, Fangui X.
Andersen, Stacy L.
Daw, E. Warwick
Malovini, Alberto
Kojima, Toshio
Hirose, Nobuyoshi
Schupf, Nicole
Puca, Annibale
Perls, Thomas T
author_sort Sebastiani, Paola
collection PubMed
description Despite evidence from family studies that there is a strong genetic influence upon exceptional longevity, relatively few genetic variants have been associated with this trait. One reason could be that many genes individually have such weak effects that they cannot meet standard thresholds of genome wide significance, but as a group in specific combinations of genetic variations, they can have a strong influence. Previously we reported that such genetic signatures of 281 genetic markers associated with about 130 genes can do a relatively good job of differentiating centenarians from non-centenarians particularly if the centenarians are 106 years and older. This would support our hypothesis that the genetic influence upon exceptional longevity increases with older and older (and rarer) ages. We investigated this list of markers using similar genetic data from 5 studies of centenarians from the USA, Europe and Japan. The results from the meta-analysis show that many of these variants are associated with survival to these extreme ages in other studies. Since many centenarians compress morbidity and disability towards the end of their lives, these results could point to biological pathways and therefore new therapeutics to increase years of healthy lives in the general population.
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spelling pubmed-38086982013-10-30 Meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity Sebastiani, Paola Bae1, Harold Sun, Fangui X. Andersen, Stacy L. Daw, E. Warwick Malovini, Alberto Kojima, Toshio Hirose, Nobuyoshi Schupf, Nicole Puca, Annibale Perls, Thomas T Aging (Albany NY) Research Paper Despite evidence from family studies that there is a strong genetic influence upon exceptional longevity, relatively few genetic variants have been associated with this trait. One reason could be that many genes individually have such weak effects that they cannot meet standard thresholds of genome wide significance, but as a group in specific combinations of genetic variations, they can have a strong influence. Previously we reported that such genetic signatures of 281 genetic markers associated with about 130 genes can do a relatively good job of differentiating centenarians from non-centenarians particularly if the centenarians are 106 years and older. This would support our hypothesis that the genetic influence upon exceptional longevity increases with older and older (and rarer) ages. We investigated this list of markers using similar genetic data from 5 studies of centenarians from the USA, Europe and Japan. The results from the meta-analysis show that many of these variants are associated with survival to these extreme ages in other studies. Since many centenarians compress morbidity and disability towards the end of their lives, these results could point to biological pathways and therefore new therapeutics to increase years of healthy lives in the general population. Impact Journals LLC 2013-08-24 /pmc/articles/PMC3808698/ /pubmed/24244950 Text en Copyright: © 2013 Sebastiani et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
spellingShingle Research Paper
Sebastiani, Paola
Bae1, Harold
Sun, Fangui X.
Andersen, Stacy L.
Daw, E. Warwick
Malovini, Alberto
Kojima, Toshio
Hirose, Nobuyoshi
Schupf, Nicole
Puca, Annibale
Perls, Thomas T
Meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity
title Meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity
title_full Meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity
title_fullStr Meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity
title_full_unstemmed Meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity
title_short Meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity
title_sort meta-analysis of genetic variants associated with human exceptional longevity
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3808698/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24244950
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