Variants near CHRNA3/5 and APOE have age-and sex-related effects on human lifespan

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Abstract

Lifespan is a trait of enormous personal interest. Research into the biological basis of human lifespan, however, is hampered by the long time to death. Using a novel approach of regressing (272,081) parental lifespans beyond age 40 years on participant genotype in a new large data set (UK Biobank), we here show that common variants near the apolipoprotein E and nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit alpha 5 genes are associated with lifespan. The effects are strongly sex and age dependent, with APOE I4 differentially influencing maternal lifespan (P=4.2 × 10 â '15, effect â '1.24 years of maternal life per imputed risk allele in parent; sex difference, P=0.011), and a locus near CHRNA3/5 differentially affecting paternal lifespan (P=4.8 × 10 â '11, effect â '0.86 years per allele; sex difference P=0.075). Rare homozygous carriers of the risk alleles at both loci are predicted to have 3.3-3.7 years shorter lives.

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Joshi, P. K., Fischer, K., Schraut, K. E., Campbell, H., Esko, T., & Wilson, J. F. (2016). Variants near CHRNA3/5 and APOE have age-and sex-related effects on human lifespan. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11174

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