Paper
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content
3

Human aging is characterized by focused changes in gene expression and deregulation of alternative splicing

Journal
Published
Jun 13, 2011
Show more
Save
TipTip
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content
3
TipTip
Save
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content

Abstract

Summary Aging is a major risk factor for chronic disease in the human population, but there are little human data on gene expression alterations that accompany the process. We examined human peripheral blood leukocyte in‐vivo RNA in a large‐scale transcriptomic microarray study (subjects aged 30–104 years). We tested associations between probe expression intensity and advancing age (adjusting for confounding factors), initially in a discovery set ( n = 458), following‐up findings in a replication set ( n = 240). We confirmed expression of key results by real‐time PCR. Of 16 571 expressed probes, only 295 (2%) were robustly associated with age. Just six probes were required for a highly efficient model for distinguishing between young and old (area under the curve in replication set; 95%). The focused nature of age‐related gene expression may therefore provide potential biomarkers of aging. Similarly, only 7 of 1065 biological or metabolic pathways were age‐associated, in gene set enrichment analysis, notably including the processing of messenger RNAs (mRNAs); [ P < 0.002, false discovery rate (FDR) q < 0.05]. This is supported by our observation of age‐associated disruption to the balance of alternatively expressed isoforms for selected genes, suggesting that modification of mRNA processing may be a feature of human aging.

Paper PDF

This paper's license is marked as closed access or non-commercial and cannot be viewed on ResearchHub. Visit the paper's external site.