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Roles of interacting stress-related genes in lifespan regulation: insights for translating experimental findings to humans.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Yashin, AI; Wu, D; Arbeev, K; Yashkin, AP; Akushevich, I; Bagley, O; Duan, M; Ukraintseva, S
Published in: Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics
January 2021

Experimental studies provided numerous evidence that caloric/dietary restriction may improve health and increase the lifespan of laboratory animals, and that the interplay among molecules that sense cellular stress signals and those regulating cell survival can play a crucial role in cell response to nutritional stressors. However, it is unclear whether the interplay among corresponding genes also plays a role in human health and lifespan.Literature about roles of cellular stressors have been reviewed, such as amino acid deprivation, and the integrated stress response (ISR) pathway in health and aging. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in two candidate genes (GCN2/EIF2AK4 and CHOP/DDIT3) that are closely involved in the cellular stress response to amino acid starvation, have been selected using information from experimental studies. Associations of these SNPs and their interactions with human survival in the Health and Retirement Study data have been estimated. The impact of collective associations of multiple interacting SNP pairs on survival has been evaluated, using a recently developed composite index: the SNP-specific Interaction Polygenic Risk Score (SIPRS).Significant interactions have been found between SNPs from GCN2/EIF2AK4 and CHOP/DDI3T genes that were associated with survival 85+ compared to survival between ages 75 and 85 in the total sample (males and females combined) and in females only. This may reflect sex differences in genetic regulation of the human lifespan. Highly statistically significant associations of SIPRS [constructed for the rs16970024 (GCN2/EIF2AK4) and rs697221 (CHOP/DDIT3)] with survival in both sexes also been found in this study.Identifying associations of the genetic interactions with human survival is an important step in translating the knowledge from experimental to human aging research. Significant associations of multiple SNPxSNP interactions in ISR genes with survival to the oldest old age that have been found in this study, can help uncover mechanisms of multifactorial regulation of human lifespan and its heterogeneity.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics

ISSN

2578-5281

Publication Date

January 2021

Volume

5

Issue

4

Start / End Page

357 / 379
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Yashin, A. I., Wu, D., Arbeev, K., Yashkin, A. P., Akushevich, I., Bagley, O., … Ukraintseva, S. (2021). Roles of interacting stress-related genes in lifespan regulation: insights for translating experimental findings to humans. Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics, 5(4), 357–379.
Yashin, Anatoliy I., Deqing Wu, Konstantin Arbeev, Arseniy P. Yashkin, Igor Akushevich, Olivia Bagley, Matt Duan, and Svetlana Ukraintseva. “Roles of interacting stress-related genes in lifespan regulation: insights for translating experimental findings to humans.Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics 5, no. 4 (January 2021): 357–79.
Yashin AI, Wu D, Arbeev K, Yashkin AP, Akushevich I, Bagley O, et al. Roles of interacting stress-related genes in lifespan regulation: insights for translating experimental findings to humans. Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics. 2021 Jan;5(4):357–79.
Yashin, Anatoliy I., et al. “Roles of interacting stress-related genes in lifespan regulation: insights for translating experimental findings to humans.Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics, vol. 5, no. 4, Jan. 2021, pp. 357–79.
Yashin AI, Wu D, Arbeev K, Yashkin AP, Akushevich I, Bagley O, Duan M, Ukraintseva S. Roles of interacting stress-related genes in lifespan regulation: insights for translating experimental findings to humans. Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics. 2021 Jan;5(4):357–379.

Published In

Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics

ISSN

2578-5281

Publication Date

January 2021

Volume

5

Issue

4

Start / End Page

357 / 379