| Literature DB >> 35948858 |
Brenda Gonzalez1, Archana Tare1, Seungjin Ryu1,2, Simon C Johnson1, Gil Atzmon1,3,4, Nir Barzilai1,3, Matt Kaeberlein5, Yousin Suh6,7,8,9.
Abstract
Mitochondrial dysfunction is a well-known contributor to aging and age-related diseases. The precise mechanisms through which mitochondria impact human lifespan, however, remain unclear. We hypothesize that humans with exceptional longevity harbor rare variants in nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes (mitonuclear genes) that confer resistance against age-related mitochondrial dysfunction. Here we report an integrated functional genomics study to identify rare functional variants in ~ 660 mitonuclear candidate genes discovered by target capture sequencing analysis of 496 centenarians and 572 controls of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. We identify and prioritize longevity-associated variants, genes, and mitochondrial pathways that are enriched with rare variants. We provide functional gene variants such as those in MTOR (Y2396Lfs*29), CPS1 (T1406N), and MFN2 (G548*) as well as LRPPRC (S1378G) that is predicted to affect mitochondrial translation. Taken together, our results suggest a functional role for specific mitonuclear genes and pathways in human longevity.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Centenarian; Genetic variant; Longevity; Mitochondria
Year: 2022 PMID: 35948858 DOI: 10.1007/s11357-022-00634-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geroscience ISSN: 2509-2723 Impact factor: 7.581