Identifying Proteomic Profiles Associated with Aging

Many research groups are using the extensive data that can be gathered on protein levels, transcription, or epigenetic marks in order to construct clocks that measure the impact of aging on an individual. All of this data changes from moment to moment and from year to year, alongside health, environment, and the biological damage of aging. Accuracy in terms of correlation with chronological or biological age varies widely, but at a few of the clocks are quite good in this regard. The work here is one example of many similar projects presently underway, in which data is sifted in search of protein levels that change in characteristic ways with age.

The present study identified proteomic profiles associated with chronological age and proteomic signatures related to aging phenotypes in a unique population of older adults. Maintenance of homeostasis is important in successful aging, whereas major deviations from stable physiology that can be captured by changes in the proteome may reflect accelerated aging and disease prevalence. Our findings demonstrated that individuals with a family history of longevity exhibit a proteome that is suggestive of delayed aging. Additionally, we showed that clusters of proteins, which were associated with age, were also related to complex diseases and other age-associated phenotypes.

We hypothesized that the proteome can capture the biology underlying the physiological age and not simply the chronological age. We tested this hypothesis in a homogenous community-dwelling cohort of Ashkenazi Jewish older adults in whom ~4,265 plasma proteins were measured. As part of the study, we aimed to develop an age prediction model based on the proteome and to test whether it predicted mortality. In addition, our cohort was enriched with individuals with familial longevity, with approximately half of the cohort composed of offspring of parents with exceptional longevity who repeatedly demonstrated better health status compared to age-matched controls

In the 1,025 participants of the LonGenity cohort (age range: 65-95, 55.7% females), we found that 754 of 4,265 proteins were associated with chronological age. Pleiotrophin (PTN), WNT1-inducible-signaling pathway protein 2 (WISP-2), chordin-like protein 1 (CRDL1), transgelin (TAGL), and R-spondin-1(RSPO1), were the proteins most significantly associated with age. Weighted gene co-expression network analysis identified two of nine modules (clusters of highly correlated proteins) to be significantly associated with chronological age and demonstrated that the biology of aging overlapped with complex age-associated diseases and other age-related traits. Pathway analysis showed that inflammatory response, organismal injury and abnormalities, cell and organismal survival, and death pathways were associated with aging.

Link: https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.13250

Comments

If a given protein (or mRNA or transcription factor, etc.) increases with age, what does that really tell us? Does it mean that it has some responsibility for an increase in mortality? Or does it mean that the substance is being over-produced in a failing attempt repair a disfunction?

So, as therapy, would you want to decrease or increase the concentration of the substance? The answer escapes me.

Posted by: Wayne Johnson at November 12th, 2020 8:11 AM

Sorry for writing off the article, but I can't find something that has been bothering me for a long time.
Now, do we know anything about the rational timing of senolithic therapies on the "human timeline"?
Basic facts such as - at what age to start taking senolitics? How many months or years to repeat the treatments? Do we know anything about it? Maybe there was already an article on this topic? Of course, everything at my own risk because I know that there is no certain answer at this stage of the research.

Posted by: Peter at November 12th, 2020 9:16 AM

Might it not be better to try and directly measure damage at the appropriate level? Maybe some not to invasive way of measuring the level of senescent cells or gluscosepane crosslinks in the skin?

Posted by: jimofoz at November 12th, 2020 3:13 PM

@Peter "at what age to start taking senolytics?" - as early as possible. If you undergone any treatments that generate large numbers of senescent cells, or you have disease known to speed aging (aka shorten meaningfully life) and increase inflammation, then even as a child. The problem is no senolytic available was proven yet to remove enough of them to even meaningfully slow senescence cell build up in humans or remove enough of them to make difference. The ones like fisetin or quercetin (available as a GRASS) have greater effect as anti-SASP than as senolytic so far so it must be taken too often. And others based on anticancer drugs still are too ineffective and too dangerous so are not safe enough for an early life treatment or for frequent usage at all. The second and the third generation maybe some day will.

Posted by: SilverSeeker at November 13th, 2020 8:30 AM
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