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Genetic determinants of proteomic aging

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Changes in the proteome and its dysregulation have long been known to be a hallmark of aging. We derived a proteomic aging trait using data on 1,459 plasma proteins from 44,435 UK Biobank individuals measured using an antibody-based assay. This metric is strongly associated with four age-related disease outcomes, even after adjusting for chronological age. Survival analysis showed that one-year older proteomic age, relative to chronological age, increases all-cause mortality hazard by 13 percent. We performed a genome-wide association analysis of proteomic age acceleration (proteomic aging trait minus chronological age) to identify its biological determinants. Proteomic age acceleration showed modest genetic correlations with four epigenetic clocks (Rg=0.17 to 0.19) and telomere length (Rg=-0.2). Once we removed associations that were explained by a single pQTL, we were left with three signals mapping to BRCA1, POLR2A and TET2 with apparent widespread effects on plasma proteomic aging. Genetic variation at these three loci has been shown to affect other omics-related aging measures. Mendelian randomisation analyses showed causal effects of higher BMI and type 2 diabetes on faster proteomic age acceleration. This supports the idea that obesity and other features of metabolic syndrome have an adverse effect on the processes of human aging.

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Acknowledgements: This research was supported by the UK Medical Research Council (MRC; Unit programme MC_UU_00006/2) and has been conducted using the UK Biobank Resource under Application Number 9905. A.M. as member of the IMS Genomics and Bioinformatics Core was supported by a Wellcome Trust Major Award (208363/Z/17/Z).

Journal Title

npj aging

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2056-3973
2731-6068

Volume Title

11

Publisher

Nature Research

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (208363/Z/17/Z)
MRC (MC_UU_00006/2)

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