Adult

Publication Title: 
Molecular Biology Reports

The PTPN22 gene, located on chromosome 1p13, encoding lymphoid protein tyrosine phosphatase (LYP), plays a crucial role in the negative control of T lymphocyte activation. Since the age-related change in T-cell signal transduction may be one of the most important causes of cell-mediated immune response decline with ageing, we performed a population-based association study to test whether the PTPN22 1858C>T (R620W) functional polymorphism affects the ability to survive to old age and to reach even exceptional life expectancy.

Author(s): 
Napolioni, Valerio
Natali, Annalia
Saccucci, Patrizia
Lucarini, Nazzareno
Publication Title: 
Rejuvenation Research

Long-living individuals (LLIs) are used to study exceptional longevity. A number of genetic variants have been found associated in LLIs to date, but further identification of variants would improve knowledge on the mechanisms regulating the rate of aging. Therefore, we performed a genome-wide association study on 410 LLIs and 553 young control individuals with a 317K single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) chip to identify novel traits associated with aging.

Author(s): 
Malovini, Alberto
Illario, Maddalena
Iaccarino, Guido
Villa, Francesco
Ferrario, Anna
Roncarati, Roberta
Anselmi, Chiara Viviani
Novelli, Valeria
Cipolletta, Ersilia
Leggiero, Eleonora
Orro, Alessandro
Rusciano, Maria Rosaria
Milanesi, Luciano
Maione, Angela Serena
Condorelli, Gianluigi
Bellazzi, Riccardo
Puca, Annibale A.
Publication Title: 
Scandinavian Journal of Public Health

INTRODUCTION: The Danish Twin Registry (DTR) has for more than 50 years been based on surveys and clinical investigations and over the two last decades also on register linkage. Currently these two approaches are merged within Statistics Denmark. RESEARCH TOPICS: Here we report on three major groups of register-based research in the DTR that used the uniqueness of twinning.

Author(s): 
Christensen, Kaare
Kyvik, Kirsten Ohm
Holm, Niels V.
Skytthe, Axel
Publication Title: 
Age (Dordrecht, Netherlands)

Our study purpose was to compare a disease-related polygenic profile that combined a total of 62 genetic variants among (i) people reaching exceptional longevity, i.e., centenarians (n = 54, 100-108 years, 48 women) and (ii) ethnically matched healthy controls (n = 87, 19-43 years, 47 women).

Author(s): 
Ruiz, Jonatan R.
Fiuza-Luces, Carmen
Buxens, Amaya
Cano-Nieto, Amalia
GÛmez-Gallego, FÈlix
Santiago, Catalina
RodrÌguez-Romo, Gabriel
Garatachea, Nuria
Lao, JosÈ I.
Mor·n, MarÌa
Lucia, Alejandro
Publication Title: 
Demography

Mortality hazard and length of time until death are widely used as health outcome measures and are themselves of fundamental demographic interest. Considerable research has asked whether labor force retirement reduces subsequent health and its mortality measures. Previous studies have reported positive, negative, and null effects of retirement on subsequent longevity and mortality hazard, but inconsistent findings are difficult to resolve because (1) nearly all data confound retirement with unemployment of older workers, and often, (2) endogeneity bias is rarely addressed analytically.

Author(s): 
Stolzenberg, Ross M.
Publication Title: 
Biogerontology

Leukocyte telomere length is widely considered a biomarker of human age and in many studies indicative of health or disease. We have obtained quantitative estimates of telomere length from blood leukocytes in a population sample, confirming results of previous studies that telomere length significantly decreases with age. Telomere length was also positively associated with several measures of healthy aging, but this relationship was dependent on age.

Author(s): 
Kim, Sangkyu
Bi, Xiuhua
Czarny-Ratajczak, Malwina
Dai, Jianliang
Welsh, David A.
Myers, Leann
Welsch, Michael A.
Cherry, Katie E.
Arnold, Jonathan
Poon, Leonard W.
Jazwinski, S. Michal
Publication Title: 
PloS One

Exceptional aging has been defined as maintenance of physical and cognitive function beyond the median lifespan despite a history of diseases and/or concurrent subclinical conditions. Since immunity is vital to individual fitness, we examined immunologic fingerprint(s) of highly functional elders. Therefore, survivors of the Cardiovascular Health Study in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA were recruited (n?=?140; mean age?=?86 years) and underwent performance testing. Blood samples were collected and examined blindly for humoral factors and T cell phenotypes.

Author(s): 
Vallejo, Abbe N.
Hamel, David L.
Mueller, Robert G.
Ives, Diane G.
Michel, Joshua J.
Boudreau, Robert M.
Newman, Anne B.
Publication Title: 
Aging

A number of leading theories of aging, namely The Antagonistic Pleiotropy Theory (Williams, 1957), The Disposable Soma Theory (Kirkwood, 1977) and most recently The Reproductive-Cell Cycle Theory (Bowen and Atwood, 2004, 2010) suggest a tradeoff between longevity and reproduction. While there has been an abundance of data linking longevity with reduced fertility in lower life forms, human data have been conflicting. We assessed this tradeoff in a cohort of genetically and socially homogenous Ashkenazi Jewish centenarians (average age ~100 years).

Author(s): 
Tabatabaie, Vafa
Atzmon, Gil
Rajpathak, Swapnil N.
Freeman, Ruth
Barzilai, Nir
Crandall, Jill
Publication Title: 
Lipids in Health and Disease

BACKGROUND: The -493G/T polymorphism in the microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP) gene is associated with lower serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and triglyceride (TG) levels and longevity in several populations, but the results are inconsistent in different racial/ethnic groups. The current study was to investigate the plausible association of MTP -493G/T polymorphism with serum lipid levels and longevity in Zhuang long-lived families residing in Bama area, a famous home of longevity in Guangxi, China.

Author(s): 
Pan, Shang-Ling
Luo, Xiao-Qiu
Lu, Ze-Ping
Lu, Shao-Hua
Luo, Huan
Liu, Cheng-Wu
Hu, Cai-You
Yang, Ming
Du, Li-Li
Song, Zhen
Pang, Guo-Fang
Wu, Hua-Yu
Huang, Jin-Bo
Peng, Jun-hua
Yin, Rui-Xing
Publication Title: 
Angiology

Single nucleotide polymorphisms of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) such as rs1799752, nuclear factor kappa B (NFkB) such as rs28362491 and cholesteryl ester transport protein (CETP) such as rs708272 (TaqB1) and rs5882 (I405V) were evaluated in nonagenarians, centenarians, and average life span individuals (controls). The study population (n = 307; 190 nonagenarians, 12 centenarians and 105 middle-aged controls) was genotyped for ACE, NFkB, and CETP genetic variants.

Author(s): 
Kolovou, Genovefa
Kolovou, Vana
Vasiliadis, Ioannis
Giannakopoulou, Vasiliki
Mihas, Constantinos
Bilianou, Helen
Kollia, Aikaterini
Papadopoulou, Evaggelia
Marvaki, Apostolia
Goumas, Georgos
Kalogeropoulos, Petros
Limperi, Sotiria
Katsiki, Niki
Mavrogeni, Sophie

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