Lewis
Member
By analyzing the DNA of the world's oldest people, Boston University scientists said Thursday they have discovered a genetic signature of longevity. They expect soon to offer a test that could let people learn whether they have the constitution to live to a very old age.
Rosa Rein celebrates her 112th birthday at a home for the elderly in Lugano's Paradiso district.
0701longevity
The researchers, who studied more than 1,000 people over the age of 100, identified a set of 150 unique genetic markers that, taken together, are linked to extreme longevity. They acknowledged they didn't know all the genes involved, nor their exact function in extending old age.
"This is an extremely complex trait that involves many processes," said lead researcher Paola Sebastiani, a biostatistician at BU's School of Public Health. Even so, "we can compute your specific predisposition to exceptional longevity."
The researchers said they had no plans to patent the technique nor profit from it. Instead, they expect to make a free test kit available on the Internet later this month to foster longevity research.
The test might reveal more than some people would like to know, the BU scientists warned. Genetic testing often reveals tantalizing but incomplete information, and it's sometimes difficult to know how to respond. People with genes for extreme longevity could face a series of difficult decisions about their careers, retirement savings, insurance coverage, medical treatments and marriages in old age.
"I don't think people are ready for this from a social point of view," said BU geriatrician Thomas Perls, the other lead researcher. "But I don't think that will stop companies from trying to market this."
Scientists have long sought to crack the genetic code of healthy aging. On average, people in developed countries can expect to live between 80 and 85 years, largely as a result of improvements in diet and public health. But the oldest of the old—the "wellderly"—live two to three decades longer, often free of mental and physical ailments.
The oldest person alive today is 116 years old, according to the Los Angeles Gerontology Group. The oldest person on record lived to be 122 years old.
No one knows the complete prescription for a healthy long life. But genes that help control cellular responses to famine, drought and other survival stresses may play a key role in staving off the diseases and chronic ailments of aging, research suggests.
While a healthy lifestyle is paramount, such genetic factors appear to become more important the longer we live. Indeed, a variation in a single key gene called FOX03A can triple the chances a person may live past 100, researchers at the Pacific Health Research Institute in Hawaii recently reported.
video
News Hub: New Clues Into Longevity's Secrets
2:01
Stefanie Ilgenfritz discusses the discovery of a new genetic signature for human longevity which could lead to a test that reveals who is likely to live to a ripe old age.
In research published online Thursday by the journal Science, Dr. Sebastiani, Dr. Perls and their colleagues studied variations in the biochemical code of DNA drawn from members of the New England Centenarian Study, considered the world's largest comprehensive study of these long-lived people and their families.
The scientists compared the genetic makeup of these centenarians with people who lived more average life spans. The genetic markers they found are scattered across the entire three billion DNA characters of the human genome and touch on at least 70 known genes. Depending on personal habits, diet, injuries, accidents and other factors, these genes boost an individual's chances of survival in the lottery of life, the scientists reported.
[LONGEVITY2]
The information allowed the BU researchers to identify those predisposed to exceptional longevity with 77% accuracy in controlled tests, they reported.
"This is a major breakthrough," said Nir Barzilai, director of the Institute for Aging Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, who studies the genetics of longevity but was not involved in the project. "It shows you that 150 markers [among millions] are all you need to distinguish between people who live to 100 and people who don't."
Journal Community
* discuss
“ Life insurance premiums will never be the same again once this test is out there. â€
—Mickey Lazorik
"Now, we are going to have to find out what all these genes are, what they do, and if there is a way we can affect them," said geriatrics expert Bradley Willcox, who was not involved in the Science paper. He is a principal investigator of the Hawaii Lifespan study and the Okinawa Centenarian Study, which involve analysis of thousands of aging men.
The free test will be available through a public website maintained by the New England Centenarian Study. To take the test, people will have to provide their own complete genome, which currently can cost thousands of dollars from gene-sequencing companies.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... 66208.html
Rosa Rein celebrates her 112th birthday at a home for the elderly in Lugano's Paradiso district.
0701longevity
The researchers, who studied more than 1,000 people over the age of 100, identified a set of 150 unique genetic markers that, taken together, are linked to extreme longevity. They acknowledged they didn't know all the genes involved, nor their exact function in extending old age.
"This is an extremely complex trait that involves many processes," said lead researcher Paola Sebastiani, a biostatistician at BU's School of Public Health. Even so, "we can compute your specific predisposition to exceptional longevity."
The researchers said they had no plans to patent the technique nor profit from it. Instead, they expect to make a free test kit available on the Internet later this month to foster longevity research.
The test might reveal more than some people would like to know, the BU scientists warned. Genetic testing often reveals tantalizing but incomplete information, and it's sometimes difficult to know how to respond. People with genes for extreme longevity could face a series of difficult decisions about their careers, retirement savings, insurance coverage, medical treatments and marriages in old age.
"I don't think people are ready for this from a social point of view," said BU geriatrician Thomas Perls, the other lead researcher. "But I don't think that will stop companies from trying to market this."
Scientists have long sought to crack the genetic code of healthy aging. On average, people in developed countries can expect to live between 80 and 85 years, largely as a result of improvements in diet and public health. But the oldest of the old—the "wellderly"—live two to three decades longer, often free of mental and physical ailments.
The oldest person alive today is 116 years old, according to the Los Angeles Gerontology Group. The oldest person on record lived to be 122 years old.
No one knows the complete prescription for a healthy long life. But genes that help control cellular responses to famine, drought and other survival stresses may play a key role in staving off the diseases and chronic ailments of aging, research suggests.
While a healthy lifestyle is paramount, such genetic factors appear to become more important the longer we live. Indeed, a variation in a single key gene called FOX03A can triple the chances a person may live past 100, researchers at the Pacific Health Research Institute in Hawaii recently reported.
video
News Hub: New Clues Into Longevity's Secrets
2:01
Stefanie Ilgenfritz discusses the discovery of a new genetic signature for human longevity which could lead to a test that reveals who is likely to live to a ripe old age.
In research published online Thursday by the journal Science, Dr. Sebastiani, Dr. Perls and their colleagues studied variations in the biochemical code of DNA drawn from members of the New England Centenarian Study, considered the world's largest comprehensive study of these long-lived people and their families.
The scientists compared the genetic makeup of these centenarians with people who lived more average life spans. The genetic markers they found are scattered across the entire three billion DNA characters of the human genome and touch on at least 70 known genes. Depending on personal habits, diet, injuries, accidents and other factors, these genes boost an individual's chances of survival in the lottery of life, the scientists reported.
[LONGEVITY2]
The information allowed the BU researchers to identify those predisposed to exceptional longevity with 77% accuracy in controlled tests, they reported.
"This is a major breakthrough," said Nir Barzilai, director of the Institute for Aging Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, who studies the genetics of longevity but was not involved in the project. "It shows you that 150 markers [among millions] are all you need to distinguish between people who live to 100 and people who don't."
Journal Community
* discuss
“ Life insurance premiums will never be the same again once this test is out there. â€
—Mickey Lazorik
"Now, we are going to have to find out what all these genes are, what they do, and if there is a way we can affect them," said geriatrics expert Bradley Willcox, who was not involved in the Science paper. He is a principal investigator of the Hawaii Lifespan study and the Okinawa Centenarian Study, which involve analysis of thousands of aging men.
The free test will be available through a public website maintained by the New England Centenarian Study. To take the test, people will have to provide their own complete genome, which currently can cost thousands of dollars from gene-sequencing companies.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... 66208.html