Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Integrating the environmental and genetic architectures of aging and mortality

M. Austin Argentieri, Najaf Amin, Alejo Nevado‐Holgado, William Sproviero, Jennifer A. Collister, Sarai Keestra, Midas M. Kuilman, Bigina N R Ginos, Mohsen Ghanbari, Aiden Doherty, David J. Hunter, Alexandra Alvergne, Cornelia M. van Duijn

Nature Medicine · 2025

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Summary

Both environmental exposures and genetics are known to play important roles in shaping human aging. Here we aimed to quantify the relative contributions of environment (referred to as the exposome) and genetics to aging and premature mortality. To systematically identify environmental exposures associated with aging in the UK Biobank, we first conducted an exposome-wide analysis of all-cause mortality (n = 492,567) and then assessed the associations of these exposures with a proteomic age clock (n = 45,441), identifying 25 independent exposures associated with mortality and proteomic aging. These exposures were also associated with incident age-related multimorbidity, aging biomarkers and major disease risk factors. Compared with information on age and sex, polygenic risk scores for 22 maj

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41591-024-03483-9
Catalogue ID
SNmoj7nrr6-7nl0nm
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