While The Environment In Which We Live, Including Our Socio-Economic Status Or The Food We Eat, Plays The Biggest Part, About 20 To 30% Of The Variation In Human Lifespan Comes Down To Our Genome.
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‘About 1 in 10 people carry some configurations of these markers that shorten their life by over a year compared with the population average.’
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In a new study, a team of scientists, led by Kutalik, has used an innovative computational approach to analyse a dataset of 116,279 individuals and probe 2.3 million human SNPs.
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An unparalleled number of SNPs associated with lifespan (16) were uncovered, including 14 new to science. In our approach, we prioritized changes in the DNA known to be linked to age-related diseases in order to scan the genome more efficiently, says Kutalik. This is the largest set of lifespan-associated genetic markers ever uncovered.
In addition, a person inheriting a lifespan-shortening version of one of these SNPs may die up to seven months earlier.
The approach also enabled the researchers to explore how the DNA changes affected lifespan in a holistic way. They found that most SNPs had an effect on lifespan by impacting more than a single disease or risk factor, for example through being more addicted to smoking as well as through being predisposed to schizophrenia.
The discovered SNPs, combined with gene expression data, allowed the researchers to identify that lower brain expression of three genes neighbouring the SNPs (RBM6, SULT1A1 and CHRNA5, involved in nicotine dependence) was causally linked to increased lifespan.
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"Interestingly, the gene expression impact of some of these SNPs in humans is analogous to the consequence of a low-calorie diet in mice, which is known to have positive effects on lifespan, adds Prof. Marc Robinson-Rechavi, SIB Group Leader and professor at the University of Lausanne.
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This study, which is a part of the AgingX Project supported by SystemsX.ch (the Swiss Initiative in Systems Biology), therefore brings us a step closer to grasping the mechanisms of human aging and longevity. It also proposes an innovative computational framework to improve the power of genomewide investigations of diseases more generally. As such, the framework could have promising applications in the field of personalized medicine.
Source-Eurekalert