Literature DB >> 26066993

Burden of Common Complex Disease Variants in the Exomes of Two Healthy Centenarian Brothers.

Lauren C Tindale1, Andy Zeng, Karla L Bretherick, Stephen Leach, Nina Thiessen, Angela R Brooks-Wilson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is not understood whether long-term good health is promoted by the absence of disease risk variants, the presence of protective variants, or both. We characterized the exomes of two exceptionally healthy centenarian brothers aged 106 and 109 years who had never been diagnosed with cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, Alzheimer's disease, or major pulmonary disease.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to gain insight into whether exceptional health and longevity are a result of carrying fewer disease-associated variants than typical individuals.
METHODS: We compared the number of disease-associated alleles, and the proportion of alleles predicted to be functionally damaging, between the centenarian brothers and published population data. Mitochondrial sequence reads were extracted from the exome data in order to analyze mitochondrial variants.
RESULTS: The brothers carry a similar number of common disease-associated variants and predicted damaging variants compared to reference groups. They did not carry any high-penetrance clinically actionable variants. They carry mitochondrial haplogroup T, and one brother has a single heteroplasmic variant.
CONCLUSION: Although our small sample size does not allow for definitive conclusions, a healthy aging and longevity phenotype is not necessarily due to a decreased burden of common disease-associated variants. Instead, it may be rare 'positive' variants that play a role in this desirable phenotype.
© 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26066993     DOI: 10.1159/000430462

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gerontology        ISSN: 0304-324X            Impact factor:   5.140


  4 in total

1.  Lipid and Alzheimer's disease genes associated with healthy aging and longevity in healthy oldest-old.

Authors:  Lauren C Tindale; Stephen Leach; John J Spinelli; Angela R Brooks-Wilson
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-03-28

2.  The Super-Seniors Study: Phenotypic characterization of a healthy 85+ population.

Authors:  Julius Halaschek-Wiener; Lauren C Tindale; Jennifer A Collins; Stephen Leach; Bruce McManus; Kenneth Madden; Graydon Meneilly; Nhu D Le; Joseph M Connors; Angela R Brooks-Wilson
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-05-24       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Allele-Specific Transcript Abundance: A Pilot Study in Healthy Centenarians.

Authors:  Lauren C Tindale; Nina Thiessen; Stephen Leach; Angela R Brooks-Wilson
Journal:  J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci       Date:  2020-05-22       Impact factor: 6.053

4.  Similar burden of pathogenic coding variants in exceptionally long-lived individuals and individuals without exceptional longevity.

Authors:  Danielle Gutman; Gabriel Lidzbarsky; Sofiya Milman; Tina Gao; Patrick Sin-Chan; Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Joris Deelen; Alan R Shuldiner; Nir Barzilai; Gil Atzmon
Journal:  Aging Cell       Date:  2020-08-29       Impact factor: 9.304

  4 in total

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