Implications of metabolism on multi‐systems healthy aging across the lifespan

Author:

Yao Shanshan1ORCID,Colangelo Laura A.2,Perry Andrew S.3ORCID,Marron Megan M.1,Yaffe Kristine4,Sedaghat Sanaz5,Lima Joao A. C.6,Tian Qu7ORCID,Clish Clary B.8,Newman Anne B.1,Shah Ravi V.3,Murthy Venkatesh L.9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Pittsburg Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

2. Northwestern University Chicago Illinois USA

3. Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee USA

4. University of California San Francisco California USA

5. University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

6. Johns Hopkins University Baltimore Maryland USA

7. National Institute of Aging Baltimore Maryland USA

8. Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT Cambridge Massachusetts USA

9. University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractAging is increasingly thought to involve dysregulation of metabolism in multiple organ systems that culminate in decreased functional capacity and morbidity. Here, we seek to understand complex interactions among metabolism, aging, and systems‐wide phenotypes across the lifespan. Among 2469 adults (mean age 74.7 years; 38% Black) in the Health, Aging and Body Composition study we identified metabolic cross‐sectionally correlates across 20 multi‐dimensional aging‐related phenotypes spanning seven domains. We used LASSO‐PCA and bioinformatic techniques to summarize metabolome‐phenome relationships and derive metabolic scores, which were subsequently linked to healthy aging, mortality, and incident outcomes (cardiovascular disease, disability, dementia, and cancer) over 9 years. To clarify the relationship of metabolism in early adulthood to aging, we tested association of these metabolic scores with aging phenotypes/outcomes in 2320 participants (mean age 32.1, 44% Black) of the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study. We observed significant overlap in metabolic correlates across the seven aging domains, specifying pathways of mitochondrial/cellular energetics, host‐commensal metabolism, inflammation, and oxidative stress. Across four metabolic scores (body composition, mental‐physical performance, muscle strength, and physical activity), we found strong associations with healthy aging and incident outcomes, robust to adjustment for risk factors. Metabolic scores for participants four decades younger in CARDIA were related to incident cardiovascular, metabolic, and neurocognitive performance, as well as long‐term cardiovascular disease and mortality over three decades. Conserved metabolic states are strongly related to domain‐specific aging and outcomes over the life‐course relevant to energetics, host‐commensal interactions, and mechanisms of innate immunity.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Kaiser Foundation Research Institute

University of Minnesota

National Institute on Aging

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Northwestern University

National Institute of Nursing Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Aging

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