4.8 Article

DunedinPACE, a DNA methylation biomarker of the pace of aging

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.73420

Keywords

aging; geroscience; biological aging; gerontology; DNA methylation; epigenetic; Biological Aging; Methylation; Geroscience; Healthspan; Biomarker; Epigenetics

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute on Aging [AG032282, AG066887, AG061378]
  2. Medical Research Council [MR/P005918/1]
  3. New Zealand Health Research Council [16-604]
  4. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE)

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This study reports a novel blood biomarker of aging called DunedinPACE, which was validated in five datasets. Results showed that DunedinPACE is associated with morbidity, disability, and mortality, and provides incremental prediction beyond the GrimAge clock. This finding is significant for gerontology and geroscience research.
Background: Measures to quantify changes in the pace of biological aging in response to intervention are needed to evaluate geroprotective interventions for humans. Previously, we showed that quantification of the pace of biological aging from a DNA-methylation blood test was possible (Belsky et al., 2020). Here, we report a next-generation DNA-methylation biomarker of Pace of Aging, DunedinPACE (for Pace of Aging Calculated from the Epigenome). Methods: We used data from the Dunedin Study 1972-1973 birth cohort tracking within-individual decline in 19 indicators of organ-system integrity across four time points spanning two decades to model Pace of Aging. We distilled this two-decade Pace of Aging into a single-time-point DNA-methylation blood-test using elastic-net regression and a DNA-methylation dataset restricted to exclude probes with low test-retest reliability. We evaluated the resulting measure, named DunedinPACE, in five additional datasets. Results: DunedinPACE showed high test-retest reliability, was associated with morbidity, disability, and mortality, and indicated faster aging in young adults with childhood adversity. DunedinPACE effect-sizes were similar to GrimAge Clock effect-sizes. In analysis of incident morbidity, disability, and mortality, DunedinPACE and added incremental prediction beyond GrimAge. Conclusions: DunedinPACE is a novel blood biomarker of the pace of aging for gerontology and geroscience. Funding: This research was supported by US-National Institute on Aging grants AG032282, AG061378, AG066887, and UK Medical Research Council grant MR/P005918/1.

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