AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronological age is how many years someone has lived, while biological age shows how well their body is functioning, and this can vary even among people of the same age.
  • Scientists are trying to create ways to measure biological age in dogs by studying different dog breeds since they have different lifespans.
  • Research on dogs using special tests called methylation shows that it's challenging to find clear biological age markers, and we need to consider the differences among dog breeds to make better predictions.

Article Abstract

Chronological age reveals the number of years an individual has lived since birth. By contrast, biological age varies between individuals of the same chronological age at a rate reflective of physiological decline. Differing rates of physiological decline are related to longevity and result from genetics, environment, behavior, and disease. The creation of methylation biological age predictors is a long-standing challenge in aging research due to the lack of individual longevity data. The consistent differences in longevity between domestic dog breeds enable the construction of biological age estimators which can, in turn, be contrasted with methylation measurements to elucidate mechanisms of biological aging. We draw on three flagship methylation studies using distinct measurement platforms and tissues to assess the feasibility of creating biological age methylation clocks in the dog. We expand epigenetic clock building strategies to accommodate phylogenetic relationships between individuals, thus controlling for the use of breed standard metrics. We observe that biological age methylation clocks are affected by population stratification and require heavy parameterization to achieve effective predictions. Finally, we observe that methylation-related markers reflecting biological age signals are rare and do not colocalize between datasets.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11272130PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/aging.206012DOI Listing

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