| Literature DB >> 26414954 |
Yi Zeng1,2, Huashuai Chen1,3, Ting Ni4, Rongping Ruan5, Chao Nie6, Xiaomin Liu6, Lei Feng7, Fengyu Zhang8, Jiehua Lu9, Jianxin Li9, Yang Li10, Wei Tao11, Simon G Gregory12, William Gottschalk13, Michael W Lutz13, Kenneth C Land14, Anatoli Yashin14, Qihua Tan15, Ze Yang16, Lars Bolund6,17, Qi Ming6,18, Huanming Yang6,19,20, Junxia Min21, D Craig Willcox22,23, Bradley J Willcox23, Jun Gu11, Elizabeth Hauser12, Xiao-Li Tian10, James W Vaupel24.
Abstract
On the basis of the genotypic/phenotypic data from Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey (CLHLS) and Cox proportional hazard model, the present study demonstrates that interactions between carrying FOXO1A-209 genotypes and tea drinking are significantly associated with lower risk of mortality at advanced ages. Such a significant association is replicated in two independent Han Chinese CLHLS cohorts (p = 0.028-0.048 in the discovery and replication cohorts, and p = 0.003-0.016 in the combined dataset). We found the associations between tea drinking and reduced mortality are much stronger among carriers of the FOXO1A-209 genotype compared to non-carriers, and drinking tea is associated with a reversal of the negative effects of carrying FOXO1A-209 minor alleles, that is, from a substantially increased mortality risk to substantially reduced mortality risk at advanced ages. The impacts are considerably stronger among those who carry two copies of the FOXO1A minor allele than those who carry one copy. On the basis of previously reported experiments on human cell models concerning FOXO1A-by-tea-compounds interactions, we speculate that results in the present study indicate that tea drinking may inhibit FOXO1A-209 gene expression and its biological functions, which reduces the negative impacts of FOXO1A-209 gene on longevity (as reported in the literature) and offers protection against mortality risk at oldest-old ages. Our empirical findings imply that the health outcomes of particular nutritional interventions, including tea drinking, may, in part, depend upon individual genetic profiles, and the research on the effects of nutrigenomics interactions could potentially be useful for rejuvenation therapies in the clinic or associated healthy aging intervention programs.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26414954 PMCID: PMC4931303 DOI: 10.1089/rej.2015.1737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rejuvenation Res ISSN: 1549-1684 Impact factor: 4.663