Correlation between the level of cytogenetic aberrations in cultured human lymphocytes and the age and gender of donors

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Abstract

To answer whether the age-related accumulation of chromosomal damage differs in men and women, and whether the aberration level in centenarians is proportional to their age, cytogenetic aberrations in dividing cells were analyzed. G-band karyotyping of mitotic spreads from lymphocytes was performed in 52 Polish centenarians and 71 controls (aged 21-78). Statistical evaluation was performed using nonparametric tests and regression analysis. The average level of all chromosomal aberrations was comparable in centenarians of both genders, but the age-related increase in chromosomal damage occurred faster in women than in men. Aging in both genders was marked by the increasing level of all aberrations rather than by chromosome-specific changes; the loss of X chromosome was the leading contributor in women. The age-related increase in the level of chromosomal damage reflected accumulation of dividing cells with a small number of aberrations. Individuals who survive to the extreme old age appear to accumulate aberrations at the slower rate. Copyright 2006 by The Gerontological Society of America.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Wojda, A., Ziȩtkiewicz, E., Mossakowska, M., Pawłowski, W., Skrzypczak, K., & Witt, M. (2006). Correlation between the level of cytogenetic aberrations in cultured human lymphocytes and the age and gender of donors. Journals of Gerontology - Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, 61(8), 763–772. https://doi.org/10.1093/gerona/61.8.763

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