| Literature DB >> 33329714 |
Abstract
Aging is an inevitable biological phenomenon displayed by single cells and organs to entire organismal systems. Aging as a biological process is characterized as a progressive decline in intrinsic biological function. Understanding the causative mechanisms of aging has always captured the imagination of researchers since time immemorial. Although both biological and chronological aging are well defined and studied in terms of genetic, epigenetic, and lifestyle predispositions, the hallmarks of aging in terms of small molecules (i.e., endogenous metabolites to chemical exposures) are limited to obscure. On top of the endogenous metabolites leading to the onset and progression of healthy aging, human beings are constantly exposed to a natural and anthropogenic "chemical" environment round the clock, from conception till death, affecting one's physiology, health and well-being, and disease predisposition. The research community has started gaining sizeable insights into deciphering the aging factors such as immunosenescence, nutrition, frailty, inflamm-aging, and diseases till date, without much input from their interaction with exogenous chemical exposures. The "exposome" around us, mostly, accelerates the process of aging by affecting the internal biological pathways and signaling mechanisms that result in the deterioration of human health. However, the entirety of exposome on human aging is far from established. This review intends to catalog the known and established associations of the exposome from past studies focusing on aging in humans and other model organisms. Further discussed are the current technologies and informatics tools that enable the study of aging exposotypes, and thus, provide a window of opportunities and challenges to study the "aging exposome" in granular details.Entities:
Keywords: aging; exposome; informatics; mass spectrometry; metabolite; model; pollution; telomere
Year: 2020 PMID: 33329714 PMCID: PMC7732411 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2020.574936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
FIGURE 1(A) Growth in research publications at PubMed pertaining to “exposomics” and “exposomics and aging” research. (B) Human aging from child birth (neonatal) through adolescence and the ultimate of life, death are riddled with exposure to chemicals surrounding us. As with the incremental aging one experiences physiological decline, possibly the cumulative exposome increases inside human body. (C) Human chemical exposure ranges from addiction (alcohol, drugs, cocaine, and smoking), to air pollution (PM, gases, industrial vapors), water (pollutions, pesticides, and PFAS), drugs (pharmaceuticals, and medications), the resident internal and external gut microbiome, domestic waste and indoor pollution (dust, cooking, and gases), occupational exposures (hospital disinfectants to asbestosis), pollution (fossil fuel burning to plastic), pets (carrying environmental pollution to microbiome), personal hygiene products (PHPs) (perfumes to soaps) to diet (and nutrition).
List of studies that looked at exposure and its effect on aging in human studies.
| Exposure | Cohort information | Findings | References |
| PM2.5 | 166 non-smoking elderly | 5 μg/m3 increment in annual PM2.5 concentration was associated with a relative decrease of 16.8% (95% CI: –26.0%, –7.4%, | |
| PM2.5 | Birth cohort study of 641 mother-new born pairs | Mothers with higher residential exposure; mothers gave birth to new-borns with significantly lower telomere length; a 5 μg/m3 increase in residential PM2.5 exposure during pregnancy, cord blood telomeres were 9% shorter and placental telomeres 13% shorter. | |
| PM2.5 (indoor) | First group ( | Indoor PM2.5 exposure levels were positively associated with skin aging symptoms, i.e., score of pigment spots on forehead (12.5% more spots per increase of IQR, | |
| PM2.5 component species (ammonium, elemental carbon, organic carbon, nitrate, and sulfate) | 552 participants from the Normative Aging (yr. 2000–2011) ( | Interquartile range increases in both 1-year sulfate (95%CI: 0.28, 0.74, | |
| Air pollution (PM10, PM2.5, PM2.5 absorbance/black carbon (BC), and NO | KORA F4 cohort | BC and PM10 were broadly associated with biological aging in men; long-term exposure to air pollution is associated with biological aging measures, potentially in a sex-specific manner. | |
| Indoor pollution | Pingding (in northern China): | cooking with solid fuels was significantly associated with a 5–8% more severe wrinkle appearance on face and an 74% increased risk of having fine wrinkles on back of hands in both studies combined, independent of age and other influences on skin aging. | |
| BC | Male participants of the Normative Aging Study in the greater Boston, MA, United States | Association between BC and blood markers were not observed in main effects models or when stratified by obesity status; BC was positively associated with markers of inflammation in men with CHD (particularly vascular endothelial growth factor) and in men with diabetes (particularly interleukin-1β and tumor necrosis factor-α). | |
| Smoking | 966 individuals who participated in a case-control study to investigate environmental and genetic risk factors for skin cancer | Association among increasing age, sun exposure, and amount of telangiectasia was strong among men, but less apparent among women; smoking was also associated with elastosis among both sexes, and with telangiectasia predominantly among men. | |
| Smoking | Spanish population, 1,474 participants (18–60 years old) | Most participants had Fitzpatrick skin phototype II (44.1%) and skin aging in accordance with their current age (69.0%); age, smoking habit, use of sunscreen and use of cosmetics were all significant independent predictors of skin aging. | |
| Lead | 459 men, Normative Aging Study, Boston | Blood lead concentration was positively and significantly associated with concurrent concentration of serum creatinine ( | |
| Lead | 744 men, Normative Aging Study of the Department of Veterans Affairs | Rate of creatinine clearance was significantly and negatively associated with increasing levels of blood lead. | |
| Lead | 777 male participants (August 1991 and October 1996) in the Department of Veterans Affairs Normative Aging Study | A positive association between patellar bone lead and uric acid levels ( | |
| Anaesthesia | 1819 subjects with median (25th and 75th percentiles) follow-up of 5.1 (2.7–7.6) year and 4 (3–6) cognitive assessments | In older adults, exposure to general anaesthesia and surgery was associated with a subtle decline in cognitive | |
| Solvents | 41 floor layers and 40 carpenters | Among the oldest subjects (>60 years), only floor layers showed decline in visual memory; most highly exposed floor layers deteriorated significantly more than their referents in visual memory and perceptual speed. |
FIGURE 2Range of human chemical exposures that are associated with aging. From heavy metals/ions to particulate matter (PM) of various sizes (PM2.5, PM10), carbon black (BC), pesticides, PDBEs, phthalates, BPA, drugs (methamphetamine, paracetamol) to metalloids (methylmercury, arsenate) to chemicals from addiction (ethanol, nicotine, cocaine). Shown also are selenium and crocin (from Saffron plant) that exert protective effect on aging.
List of studies that looked at exposure and its effect on aging in animal models.
| Exposure | Models | Treatment | Findings | Link |
| Fatty acid hydroperoxides (OFA) and/or vit E | Porcine cells | Exposure to 5 μM OFA for 40 passages | Age-related decrease in | |
| Bisphenol A (BPA) | Does of 0, 100, 500, and 1,000 μM of BPA, and 0, 10, 25, and 50 μM of BPA | Increased the generation of | ||
| Arsenite | Arsenite exposure (100 μM) | Age biomarkers affected: a decrease | ||
| Arsenite | Exposure to 0.1–1,000 μM arsenite | Transient | ||
| Cocaine, nicotine | High-dose cocaine (40 mg/kg/d), or, high-dose nicotine (5.0 mg/kg/d) | Prenatal exposure showed long-term effects on | ||
| Alcohol | Liquid alcohol diets containing 0, 17.5, or 35% ethanol-derived calories, from gestation d 7 to parturition | Showed a | ||
| Endocrine disruptors | Twelve consecutive d of vehicle (dimethylsulfoxide), estradiol benzoate (EB) (1 mg/kg), and MXC (methoxychlor) (low dose, 20 μg/kg or high dose, 100 mg/kg), beginning on embryonic d 19 through post-natal d 7 | Early life exposure has lifelong effects on | ||
| Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) | Mixture of phthalates, pesticides, UV-filters, bisphenol A, butylparaben, paracetamol | In pre-pubertal rats, a significant reduction in primordial follicle numbers, reduced plasma levels of prolactin; incidence of irregular estrous cycles was higher, reduced ovary weights, raises concern regarding potential effects of mixtures of EDCs on female reproductive function. | ||
| Estradiol benzoate (EB) | Silastic implants containing estradiol benzoate (EB) in solution placed into 5 d old female Wistar rats and removed 1 or 5 d later | Premature occurrence of vaginal opening was observed in all three estrogenized groups independently of EB; ovaries of these last two groups showed a reduced number of corpora lutea and an increased number of large follicles, ovarian weight and progesterone content gradually. | ||
| Methylmercury | Pregnant females exposed to drinking water containing 0, 0.5, or 6.4 ppm Hg as methylmercury, i.e., 40 and 500 μg/kg/d of mercury intake | Prenatal exposure | ||
| Methylmercury | Doses of 0, 0.5, or 6.4 ppm Hg in the drinking water of female rats at least 4 weeks before mating and continuing until post-natal 16 d | Gradual decline in the reinforcement rate began to appear in low- and high-dose rats at about 500 and 800 d of age, respectively, the lever-press duration increased, the inter-response time (IRT) was unaffected, and the time between response bursts increased. | ||
| Triethyltin (TET) | Dosed with TET (5 mg/kg) | At 24 months, TET-treated rats showed significant deficits in | ||
| Aluminum | Pregnant females orally exposed to 0, 50, and 100 mg Al/kg/d | Decreased learning performance of the task in both adult and old rats, age-related effect on water maze performance, accumulation of Al in brain at 2 years of age. | ||
| 5-bromo-2’-deoxyuridine | Subcutaneous injections (3.2 mg) of a synthetic analog of thymidine, 5-bromo-2’-deoxyuridine (BrdUrd), on 1 and 3 d, or 1, 3, 7, and 21 d of post-natal life | Mean life span decreased by 31 and 38% in male and by 14 and 27% in female rats that received 2 and 4 injections of BrdUrd; opening of the vagina was delayed, inhibition of compensatory ovarian hypertrophy induced by hemiovariectomy at the age of 3 months was found in females; neonatal administration of BrdUrd to rats doubles the incidence of chromosome aberrations in peripheral blood lymphocytes; dose-related increase in tumor incidence. | ||
| Di(2-Ethylhexyl) Phthalate | Orally dosed DEHP (20μg/kg/d−500 mg/kg/d) daily for 10 d | DEHP significantly decreased inhibin B levels; significantly increased the BAX/BCL2 ratio in primordial follicles leading to a significant decrease in primordial and total follicle numbers | ||
| DecaBDE Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) | Daily oral dose of 0, 6, or 20 mg/kg decaBDE from post-natal 2–15 d | Performance of the aging cohort was significantly affected, on the light–dark discrimination, older decaDBE treated mice learned the task more slowly, made more perseverative errors after an initial error, and had lower latencies to respond compared with controls. | ||
| Alcohol | Single teratogenic dose (5.8 g/kg) of ethyl alcohol during organogenesis on the 9 | In adulthood, the offspring suffered a | ||
| Lead | Pb/E exposure, 0.2% Pb-acetate added to the deionized drinking water of the pregnant female |
List of software tools, resources and chemical and spectral databases for exposomics research.
| Tool | Link/Availability | Type | Utility/Description | References |
| Webserver | ||||
| Competitive Fragmentation Modeling (CFM)-ID | Webserver | -Performs annotation of peaks in a spectrum for a known chemical structure; predicts of spectra for a given chemical structure and putative metabolite identification (a predicted ranking of possible candidate) | ||
| Python | -Automated large-scale annotation of metabolites using tandem MS data -Interrogated against a compiled DB containing tens of millions of compounds with pre-calculated fingerprints and fragmentation patterns | |||
| Standalone, Java | -Combines fragmentation tree computation and machine learning. -Finds 150% more correct identifications than the second-best search method | |||
| R | - Annotating and evaluating in-source mass spectra as obtained from full-scan experiments | |||
| Web | -Combines compound DB searching and fragmentation prediction for metabolite identification from tandem MS data | |||
| Web | - Uses tandem MS data in many standard formats and allows the user to infer the sets of fragment and neutral loss features that co-occur together (Mass2Motifs). -In an alternative workflow, the user can also decompose a data set onto predefined Mass2Motifs | |||
| Standalone | -Molecular formulas of precursor ions are determined from accurate mass, isotope ratio, and product ion information. -All isomer structures of the predicted formula are retrieved from metabolome DBs, and MS/MS fragmentations are predicted | |||
| Web | - An extensively curated DB of HR tandem mass spectra that are arranged into spectral trees. -MS/MS and multi-stage MS | NA | ||
| Standalone | -Computational approach for molecular structure identification. -SIRIUS 4 integrates CSI:FingerID for searching in molecular structure DBs. -Can achieve identification rates of > 70% on challenging metabolomics datasets. | |||
| Web | -Consists of 41,474 achiral structures that were linked to 65,957 PubChem CIDs and to over 878,966 PubMed articles | |||
| Web | - An online chemical DB offering access to physical and chemical properties, molecular structure, spectral data, synthetic methods, safety information, and nomenclature for almost 25 million unique chemical compounds -Linked to almost 400 separate data sources on the Web. | |||
| Web | -185 candidate dietary biomarkers with 403 associations with food intake (from metabolomic studies) -1,356 associations between dietary biomarkers and cancer risk in epidemiological studies, collected from 313 publications | |||
| Web | - Dietary macronutrients and micronutrients information, flavor, color, taste, texture and aroma. -Each entry with > 100 separate data fields covering detailed compositional, biochemical and physiological information -search amenable for browsing FooDB by food source, name, descriptors, function or concentrations. | NA | ||
| Web | -605 electron-ionization mass spectrometry (EI-MS), 137 fast atom bombardment MS and 9,276 electrospray ionization (ESI)-MS | |||
| Web | -Metadata-centric, auto-curating repository designed for storage and querying of mass spectral records. -DB of metabolite mass spectra, metadata and associated compounds. -contains over 200,000 mass spectral records from experimental and in-silico libraries as well as from user contributions | NA | ||
| Web | -To aid identification of environmental toxicants, food contaminants and supplements, drugs, and antibiotics and their biotransformation products | |||
| Web | -Consists of thermochemical, ion energetics, solubility, and spectroscopic data. | |||
| Web | -First NMR DB that allows open access to the DB and open and peer reviewed submission of datasets -Free repository of assigned 1H and 13C NMR spectra. -Collaborating laboratories can fully replicate the DB and to create a highly available network of NMRShiftDB mirrors. -DB contains about 10,000 structures and assigned spectra | |||
| Web | - Data on the effects of food processing on polyphenol contents in foods. | |||
| Web | -A gold standard DB, repoDB, that consists of both true positives (approved drugs), and true negatives (failed drugs) | |||
| Web | -Plant specific (phytochemical) MS/MS spectra DB/resource for fragment pattern analysis of tandem MS data | |||
| Web | -An integrated spectral DB system for organic compounds, which includes 6 different types of spectra under a directory of the compounds. -The six spectra are as follows: an EI-MS spectrum, a Fourier transform infrared spectrum (FT-IR), a1HNMR, 13C NMR spectrum, a laser Raman spectrum, and an electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum. | NA | ||
| Web | -First version of T3DB (in 2010) contained data on nearly 2900 common toxic substances along with detailed information on their chemical properties, descriptions, targets, toxic effects, toxicity thresholds, sequences (for both targets and toxins), mechanisms and references -Latest release of T3DB includes more compounds (>3,600), targets (>2,000) and gene expression datasets (>15,000 genes). -Contains informative chemical ontologies and a large number of referential NMR, MS/MS and GC-MS spectra. | |||
FIGURE 3Mass spectrometry and spectroscopy provide the necessary analytical tools that aid in capturing the aging “exposome,” which when processed by the software tools, resources, and databases enable to “crack” (identify) the known and unknown chemical exposome.