Mosaic Chromosomal Alterations and Human Longevity

Author:

Leshchyk Anastasia12ORCID,Xiang Qingyan3,Andersen Stacy L4ORCID,Gurinovich Anastasia5,Song Zeyuan3,Lee Joseph H6,Christensen Kaare7ORCID,Yashin Anatoliy8,Wojczynski Mary9,Schwander Karen10,Perls Thomas T4,Monti Stefano2,Sebastiani Paola511

Affiliation:

1. Bioinformatics Program, Boston University , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

2. Department of Medicine, Computational Biomedicine Section, Boston University , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

3. Department of Biostatistics, Boston University , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

4. Department of Medicine, Section of Geriatrics, Boston University , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

5. Institute for Clinical Research and Health Policy Studies, Tufts Medical Center , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

6. Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer’s Disease and the Aging Brain, Columbia University , New York, New York , USA

7. Department of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark , Odense , Denmark

8. Social Science Research Institute, Duke University , Durham, North Carolina , USA

9. Department of Genetics, Washington University in St. Louis , St. Louis, Missouri , USA

10. Division of Biostatistics, Washington University in St. Louis , St. Louis, Missouri , USA

11. Department of Medicine, Tufts University , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

Abstract

Abstract Mosaic chromosomal alterations (mCAs) are structural alterations associated with aging, cancer, cardiovascular disease, infectious diseases, and mortality. The distribution of mCAs in centenarians and individuals with familial longevity is poorly understood. We used MOsaic CHromosomal Alteration (MoChA) to discover mCAs in 2050 centenarians, offspring, and 248 controls from the New England Centenarian Study (NECS) and in 3 642 subjects with familial longevity and 920 spousal controls from the Long-Life Family Study (LLFS). We analyzed study-specific associations of somatic mCAs with age, familial longevity, the incidence of age-related diseases, and mortality and aggregated the results by meta-analysis. We show that the accumulation of mCAs > 100 KB increased to 102 years and plateaued at older ages. Centenarians and offspring accumulated fewer autosomal mCAs compared with controls (relative risk 0.637, p = .0147). Subjects with the APOE E4 allele had a 35.3% higher risk of accumulating autosomal mCAs (p = .002). Males were at higher risk for mCAs compared to females (male relative risk 1.36, p = 5.15e−05). mCAs were associated with increased hazard for cancer (hazard ratio 1.2) and dementia (hazard ratio 1.259) at a 10% false discovery rate. We observed a borderline significant association between mCAs and risk for mortality (hazard ratio 1.07, p = .0605). Our results show that the prevalence of individuals with mCAs does not continue to increase at ages >102 years and factors promoting familial longevity appear to confer protections from mCAs. These results suggest that limited mCA accumulation could be an important mechanism for extreme human longevity that needs to be investigated.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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