World's oldest people share no genetic secrets
22 Nov TN
Think the reason some people live beyond the age of 100 is because of
their genes? Think again.
US scientists said Wednesday they´ve found no genetic secrets shared
between a group of 17 supercentenarians, or those who have lived beyond
110."From this small sample size, the researchers were unable to find
rare protein-altering variants significantly associated with extreme
longevity compared to control genomes," said the study led by Hinco
Gierman of Stanford University.
The research was published in the November 12 issue of the
open-access journal PLOS ONE.People who live to age 100 and beyond are
far less likely to get cancer a 19 percent lifetime incidence compared
to 49 percent in the general population according to background
information in the article.Those who live more than a century also have
lower rates of cardiovascular disease and stroke than controls.
There are 74 supercentenarians alive worldwide, and 22 live in the
United States.The 17 people whose genomes were sequenced had lived to
age 110 and older.Their average age at death was 112, and the longest
living member of the group lived to age 116.
Fourteen had European ancestry; two were Hispanic and one was
African-American.
Even though no genetic clues emerged in this study, scientists said
they would make their analysis available to the public as a resource for
future research."Supercentenarians are extremely rare and their genomes
could hold secrets for the genetic basis of extreme longevity," it said.
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