Back to Search Start Over

A catalogue of omics biological ageing clocks reveals substantial commonality and associations with disease risk

Authors :
Erin Macdonald-Dunlop
Caroline Hayward
Peter K. Joshi
Chris Haley
Frkatovic A
Tõnu Esko
Lucija Klaric
Nele Taba
Krista Fischer
James F. Wilson
Rosie M. Walker
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Biological age (BA), a measure of functional capacity and prognostic of health outcomes that discriminates between individuals of the same chronological age (chronAge), has been estimated using a variety of biomarkers. Previous comparative studies have mainly used epigenetic models (clocks), we use ~1000 participants to create eleven omics ageing clocks, with correlations of 0.45-0.97 with chronAge, even with substantial sub-setting of biomarkers. These clocks track common aspects of ageing with 94% of the variance in chronAge being shared among clocks. The difference between BA and chronAge - omics clock age acceleration (OCAA) - often associates with health measures. One year’s OCAA typically has the same effect on risk factors/10-year disease incidence as 0.46/0.45 years of chronAge. Epigenetic and IgG glycomics clocks appeared to track generalised ageing while others capture specific risks. We conclude BA is measurable and prognostic and that future work should prioritise health outcomes over chronAge.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e3e4b7693aec0879285ec41368a7a851