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Protective role of the apolipoprotein E2 allele in age-related disease traits and survival: evidence from the Long Life Family Study
Authors:Alexander M. Kulminski  Nalini Raghavachari  Konstantin G. Arbeev  Irina Culminskaya  Liubov Arbeeva  Deqing Wu  Svetlana V. Ukraintseva  Kaare Christensen  Anatoliy I. Yashin
Affiliation:1.Biodemography of Aging Research Unit, Social Science Research Institute,Duke University,Durham,USA;2.National Institute on Aging,Bethesda,USA;3.The Danish Aging Research Center,University of Southern Denmark,Odense C,Denmark;4.Department of Clinical Genetics and Department of Clinical Biochemistry and Pharmacology,Odense University Hospital,Odense C,Denmark
Abstract:The apolipoprotein E (apoE) is a classic example of a gene exhibiting pleiotropism. We examine potential pleiotropic associations of the apoE2 allele in three biodemographic cohorts of long-living individuals, offspring, and spouses from the Long Life Family Study, and intermediate mechanisms, which can link this allele with age-related phenotypes. We focused on age-related macular degeneration, bronchitis, asthma, pneumonia, stroke, creatinine, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, diseases of heart (HD), cancer, and survival. Our analysis detected favorable associations of the ε2 allele with lower LDL-C levels, lower risks of HD, and better survival. The ε2 allele was associated with LDL-C in each gender and biodemographic cohort, including long-living individuals, offspring, and spouses, resulting in highly significant association in the entire sample (β = ?7.1, p = 6.6 × 10?44). This allele was significantly associated with HD in long-living individuals and offspring (relative risk [RR] = 0.60, p = 3.1 × 10?6) but this association was not mediated by LDL-C. The protective effect on survival was specific for long-living women but it was not explained by LDL-C and HD in the adjusted model (RR = 0.70, p = 2.1 × 10?2). These results show that ε2 allele may favorably influence LDL-C, HD, and survival through three mechanisms. Two of them (HD- and survival-related) are pronounced in the long-living parents and their offspring; the survival-related mechanism is also sensitive to gender. The LDL-C-related mechanism appears to be independent of these factors. Insights into mechanisms linking ε2 allele with age-related phenotypes given biodemographic structure of the population studied may benefit translation of genetic discoveries to health care and personalized medicine.
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