Mendelian randomization evidence for the causal effect of mental well-being on healthy aging.
Chao-Jie YeDong LiuMing-Ling ChenLi-Jie KongChun DouYi-Ying WangYanan HouYu XuMian LiZhi-Yun ZhaoRui-Zhi ZhengJie ZhengJie-Li LuYu-Hong ChenGuang NingWei-Qing WangYu-Fang BiTian-Ge WangPublished in: Nature human behaviour (2024)
Mental well-being relates to multitudinous lifestyle behaviours and morbidities and underpins healthy aging. Thus far, causal evidence on whether and in what pattern mental well-being impacts healthy aging and the underlying mediating pathways is unknown. Applying genetic instruments of the well-being spectrum and its four dimensions including life satisfaction, positive affect, neuroticism and depressive symptoms (n = 80,852 to 2,370,390), we performed two-sample Mendelian randomization analyses to estimate the causal effect of mental well-being on the genetically independent phenotype of aging (aging-GIP), a robust and representative aging phenotype, and its components including resilience, self-rated health, healthspan, parental lifespan and longevity (n = 36,745 to 1,012,240). Analyses were adjusted for income, education and occupation. All the data were from the largest available genome-wide association studies in populations of European descent. Better mental well-being spectrum (each one Z-score higher) was causally associated with a higher aging-GIP (β [95% confidence interval (CI)] in different models ranging from 1.00 [0.82-1.18] to 1.07 [0.91-1.24] standard deviations (s.d.)) independent of socioeconomic indicators. Similar association patterns were seen for resilience (β [95% CI] ranging from 0.97 [0.82-1.12] to 1.04 [0.91-1.17] s.d.), self-rated health (0.61 [0.43-0.79] to 0.76 [0.59-0.93] points), healthspan (odds ratio [95% CI] ranging from 1.23 [1.02-1.48] to 1.35 [1.11-1.65]) and parental lifespan (1.77 [0.010-3.54] to 2.95 [1.13-4.76] years). Two-step Mendelian randomization mediation analyses identified 33 out of 106 candidates as mediators between the well-being spectrum and the aging-GIP: mainly lifestyles (for example, TV watching and smoking), behaviours (for example, medication use) and diseases (for example, heart failure, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, stroke, coronary atherosclerosis and ischaemic heart disease), each exhibiting a mediation proportion of >5%. These findings underscore the importance of mental well-being in promoting healthy aging and inform preventive targets for bridging aging disparities attributable to suboptimal mental health.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- heart failure
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- depressive symptoms
- healthcare
- social support
- public health
- cardiovascular disease
- physical activity
- atrial fibrillation
- coronary artery disease
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- gene expression
- genome wide association
- pulmonary hypertension
- big data
- coronary artery
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- risk assessment
- artificial intelligence