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Genetic associations with longevity are on average stronger in females than in males.

Zeng Y, Chen H, Liu X, Song Z, Yao Y, Lei X, Lv X, Cheng L, Chen Z, Bai C, Yin Z, Lv Y, Lu J, Li J, Land KC

Heliyon · 2024 · ▲ 4 citations

Abstract

It is long observed that females tend to live longer than males in nearly every country. However, the underlying mechanism remains elusive. In this study, we discovered that genetic associations with longevity are on average stronger in females than in males through bio-demographic analyses of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) dataset of 2178 centenarians and 2299 middle-age controls of Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Study (CLHLS). This discovery is replicated across North and South regions of China, and is further confirmed by North-South discovery/replication analyses of different and independent datasets of Chinese healthy aging candidate genes with CLHLS participants who are not in CLHLS GWAS, including 2972 centenarians and 1992 middle-age controls. Our polygenic risk score analyses of eight exclusive groups of sex-specific genes, analyses of sex-specific and not-sex-specific individual genes, and Genome-wide Complex Trait Analysis using all SNPs all reconfirm that genetic associations with longevity are on average stronger in females than in males. Our discovery/replication analyses are based on genetic datasets of in total 5150 centenarians and compatible middle-age controls, which comprises the worldwide largest sample of centenarians. The present study's findings may partially explain the well-known male-female health-survival paradox and suggest that genetic variants may be associated with different reactions between males and females to the same vaccine, drug treatment and/or nutritional intervention. Thus, our findings provide evidence to steer away from traditional view that "one-size-fits-all" for clinical interventions, and to consider sex differences for improving healthcare efficiency. We suggest future investigations focusing on effects of interactions between sex-specific genetic variants and environment on longevity as well as biological function.

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Provenance

Source
Europe PMC
DOI
10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e23691
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-07-02 MST

Cite this

APA
Y, Z., H, C., X, L., Z, S., Y, Y., X, L., X, L., L, C., Z, C., C, B., Z, Y., Y, L., J, L., J, L., KC, L., A, Y., AM, O., L, S., Z, Y., &amp; W, T. (2024). Genetic associations with longevity are on average stronger in females than in males. <em>Heliyon</em>. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e23691
Vancouver
Y Z, H C, X L, Z S, Y Y, X L, et al. Genetic associations with longevity are on average stronger in females than in males. Heliyon. 2024. doi:10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e23691.
BibTeX
@article{zeng2024Geneti, title = {Genetic associations with longevity are on average stronger in females than in males.}, author = {Zeng Y and Chen H and Liu X and Song Z and Yao Y and Lei X and Lv X and Cheng L and Chen Z and Bai C and Yin Z and Lv Y and Lu J and Li J and Land KC and Yashin A and O'Rand AM and Sun L and Yang Z and Tao W and Gu J and Gottschalk W and Tan Q and Christensen K and Hesketh T}, journal = {Heliyon}, year = {2024}, doi = {10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e23691}, }

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