| Literature DB >> 29854078 |
Yeo Jin Kim1,2, Hyun Soo Kim1,2, Young Rok Seo1,2,3.
Abstract
Aged population is increasing worldwide due to the aging process that is inevitable. Accordingly, longevity and healthy aging have been spotlighted to promote social contribution of aged population. Many studies in the past few decades have reported the process of aging and longevity, emphasizing the importance of maintaining genomic stability in exceptionally long-lived population. Underlying reason of longevity remains unclear due to its complexity involving multiple factors. With advances in sequencing technology and human genome-associated approaches, studies based on population-based genomic studies are increasing. In this review, we summarize recent longevity and healthy aging studies of human population focusing on DNA repair as a major factor in maintaining genome integrity. To keep pace with recent growth in genomic research, aging- and longevity-associated genomic databases are also briefly introduced. To suggest novel approaches to investigate longevity-associated genetic variants related to DNA repair using genomic databases, gene set analysis was conducted, focusing on DNA repair- and longevity-associated genes. Their biological networks were additionally analyzed to grasp major factors containing genetic variants of human longevity and healthy aging in DNA repair mechanisms. In summary, this review emphasizes DNA repair activity in human longevity and suggests approach to conduct DNA repair-associated genomic study on human healthy aging.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29854078 PMCID: PMC5960555 DOI: 10.1155/2018/2984730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Summary of DNA repair-associated genes with significant genomic variants in longevity.
| Genes | Variations | Region | Populations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ATM | rs189037 | 5′-UTR | Chinese (Han) | [ |
| Italian | [ | |||
|
| ||||
| ATRIP | rs9876781 | Upstream | American (Caucasian) | [ |
|
| ||||
| EGFR | rs2072454 | Exon (synonymous) | Korean | [ |
| rs2293347 | Exon (synonymous) | |||
| rs3807362 | 3′-UTR | |||
| rs884225 | 3′-UTR | |||
|
| ||||
| ERCC2 | Lys751Gln§ | Missense (stop-gain) | Polish | [ |
| EXO1 | rs1776180 | Upstream | German | [ |
| rs735943 | Exon (missense; H/R) | |||
| rs4149965 | Exon (missense; V/M or V/L) | |||
|
| ||||
| HSPA1A | −110A/C | Upstream§§ | Italian (Southern) | [ |
| Danish | [ | |||
| G190C | §§ | Chinese (Uighur in Xinjiang) | [ | |
|
| ||||
| HSPA1B | A1267G | §§ | Danish | [ |
| Chinese (Uighur in Xinjiang) | [ | |||
|
| ||||
| HSPA1L | T2437C | §§ | Danish | [ |
| Chinese (Uighur in Xinjiang) | [ | |||
|
| ||||
| MLH1 | C670, A676, T1172 | §§ | Korean | [ |
| rs13320360 | Intron | Danish | [ | |
|
| ||||
| POLB | rs2953983 | Intron | Danish | [ |
|
| ||||
| RAD23B | rs1805329 | Exon (missense; A/V) | Danish | [ |
|
| ||||
| RAD52 | rs11571461 | Intron | Danish | [ |
|
| ||||
| SIRT1 | rs3758391 | Upstream | Chinese (Han) | [ |
| rs4746720 | 3′-UTR | |||
| rs7896005 | Intron | American (Caucasian) | [ | |
| rs12778366 | Upstream | Dutch | [ | |
|
| ||||
| TP53 | rs1042522 | Exon (missense; P/R or P/H) | Danish | [ |
| Italian (Central) | [ | |||
| rs9616906 | Upstream | American (Caucasian) | [ | |
|
| ||||
| WRN | rs13251813 | Intron | Danish | [ |
|
| ||||
| XRCC5 | rs705649 | Intron | Danish | [ |
§Variation in amino acid; §§studies on haplotype analysis.
Figure 1Direct networks among genes obtained by comparison of gene sets associated with DNA repair and human longevity. The analysis of molecular and biological networks was conducted by using Pathway Studio Web (version 11.4.0.8). Green highlighted entities indicate 16 common genes obtained by gene set comparison. These networks were built with careful curation considering the number of reference (>10) and their correlation with longevity, aging, and DNA repair.
Figure 2Major enriched networks of common genes and the top ranked pathway suggesting key contributors to longevity in aspect of DNA repair. (a) Pathways and ontologies enriched in these genes shown in a bar graph. x-axis indicates the number of overlapped genes with elements of each pathway/ontology while y-axis shows the name of statistically meaningful pathways/ontologies (p value < 0.05). (b) The most enriched pathway, “persisted DNA repair triggers genomic instability,” and direct pathway analyzed previously were combined using Pathway Studio Web (version 11.4.0.8) to explore major genes including candidate longevity-associated loci in DNA repair to provide better visualization. Green highlighted entities indicate common genes collected by gene set comparison.