Effect of longevity genetic variants on the molecular aging rate.
Anastasia GurinovichZeyuan SongWilliam ZhangAnthony FedericoStefano MontiStacy L AndersenLori L JenningsDavid J GlassNir BarzilaiSofiya MillmanThomas T PerlsPaola SebastianiPublished in: GeroScience (2021)
We conducted a genome-wide association study of 1320 centenarians from the New England Centenarian Study (median age = 104 years) and 2899 unrelated controls using >9 M genetic variants imputed to the HRC panel of ~65,000 haplotypes. The genetic variants with the most significant associations were correlated to 4131 proteins that were profiled in the serum of a subset of 224 study participants using a SOMAscan array. The genetic associations were replicated in a genome-wide association study of 480 centenarians and ~800 controls of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. The proteomic associations were replicated in a proteomic scan of approximately 1000 Ashkenazi Jewish participants from a third cohort. The analysis replicated a protein signature associated with APOE genotypes and confirmed strong overexpression of BIRC2 (p < 5E-16) and under-expression of APOB in carriers of the APOE2 allele (p < 0.05). The analysis also discovered and replicated associations between longevity variants and slower changes of protein biomarkers of aging, including a novel protein signature of rs2184061 (CDKN2A/CDKN2B in chromosome 9) that suggests a genetic regulation of GDF15. The analyses showed that longevity variants correlate with proteome signatures that could be manipulated to discover healthy-aging targets.
Keyphrases
- genome wide association study
- copy number
- genome wide
- binding protein
- protein protein
- computed tomography
- cognitive decline
- poor prognosis
- high fat diet
- high resolution
- type diabetes
- cell proliferation
- small molecule
- adipose tissue
- magnetic resonance imaging
- skeletal muscle
- drosophila melanogaster
- insulin resistance
- high density