4.4 Article

Rare genetic coding variants associated with human longevity and protection against age-related diseases

Journal

NATURE AGING
Volume 1, Issue 9, Pages 783-+

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s43587-021-00108-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 HG008153, R01 AG061155, R01 AG060747, R01 AG057909, P01 AG017242, U19 AG056278]
  2. Irma T. Hirschl Trust
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) [390870439 (EXC 2150 - ROOTS)]

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Extreme longevity in humans is strongly linked to genetic factors, especially rare coding variants in pathways related to insulin and AMP-activating protein kinase signaling. These rare variants may play a protective role against age-related pathology, potentially contributing to extended lifespan.
Extreme longevity in humans has a strong genetic component, but whether this involves genetic variation in the same longevity pathways as found in model organisms is unclear. Using whole-exome sequences of a large cohort of Ashkenazi Jewish centenarians to examine enrichment for rare coding variants, we found most longevity-associated rare coding variants converge upon conserved insulin/insulin-like growth factor1 signaling and AMP-activating protein kinase signaling pathways. Centenarians have a number of pathogenic rare coding variants similar to control individuals, suggesting that rare variants detected in the conserved longevity pathways are protective against age-related pathology. Indeed, we detected a pro-longevity effect of rare coding variants in the Wnt signaling pathway on individuals harboring the known common risk allele APOE4. The genetic component of extreme human longevity constitutes, at least in part, rare coding variants in pathways that protect against aging, including those that control longevity in model organisms.

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