Measurements of damage and repair of binary health attributes in aging mice and humans reveal that robustness and resilience decrease with age, operate over broad timescales, and are affected differently by interventions

Author:

Farrell Spencer1,Kane Alice E2,Bisset Elise3,Howlett Susan E34ORCID,Rutenberg Andrew D5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, University of Toronto

2. Blavatnik Institute, Department of Genetics, Paul F. Glenn Center for Biology of Aging Research at Harvard Medical School

3. Department of Pharmacology, Dalhousie University

4. Department of Medicine (GeriatricMedicine), Dalhousie University

5. Department of Physics and Atmospheric Science, Dalhousie University

Abstract

As an organism ages, its health-state is determined by a balance between the processes of damage and repair. Measuring these processes requires longitudinal data. We extract damage and repair transition rates from repeated observations of binary health attributes in mice and humans to explore robustness and resilience, which respectively represent resisting or recovering from damage. We assess differences in robustness and resilience using changes in damage rates and repair rates of binary health attributes. We find a conserved decline with age in robustness and resilience in mice and humans, implying that both contribute to worsening aging health – as assessed by the frailty index (FI). A decline in robustness, however, has a greater effect than a decline in resilience on the accelerated increase of the FI with age, and a greater association with reduced survival. We also find that deficits are damaged and repaired over a wide range of timescales ranging from the shortest measurement scales toward organismal lifetime timescales. We explore the effect of systemic interventions that have been shown to improve health, including the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor enalapril and voluntary exercise for mice. We have also explored the correlations with household wealth for humans. We find that these interventions and factors affect both damage and repair rates, and hence robustness and resilience, in age and sex-dependent manners.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

Reference65 articles.

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2. Aerobic exercise attenuates frailty in aging male and female c57bl/6 mice and effects systemic cytokines differentially by sex;Bisset;The Journals of Gerontology. Series A, Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences,2022

3. Bayesian Survival Analysis Using the Rstanarm R Package;Brilleman,2020

4. A complex systems approach to aging biology;Cohen;Nature Aging,2022

5. Two approaches to classifying and quantifying physical resilience in longitudinal data;Colón-Emeric;The Journals of Gerontology. Series A, Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences,2020

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