Assess Effective Age Using Genetic Assays.
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14.0 years ago
Anand ▴ 10

Hi,

I'm curious if there are any genetic tests that can quantify an individual's effective age. For example, some experiment that can be setup that correlates well with time from birth date to present age. Or asking the extended question of what proportion of your lifetime you have completed. The simplistic logic would be to assay for telomere length at a couple time points or across different cell populations.

Any ideas?

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Is there a bioinformatic/computational biology angle to this question? If not, this isn't the appropriate forum.

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It's offtopic. Bio_X2Y has posted a reasonable enough answer not to warrant further discussion I think.

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I would guess the poster can't answer this question until he/she gets an answer :) The answer could be that there's a pure biological test, or perhaps there's a bioinformatically-resolvable pattern in the analysis of a biological test like a GeneChip array.

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I was definitely thinking a computational biology angle to this question. As suggested in the answer, different cell types would indicate different ages. However, if we could test a few of these cell types at a few time points and the person-to-person variance was low enough, we would be able to predict effective age. The computational aspect, would be to setup the experiments to optimize for the best precision. This is pointless if the tests just resolve every 20 years.

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13.9 years ago
Mary 11k

Huh. Turns out there is a new assay for this, via forensic analysis.

Age assay for forensics toolkit

"Inside the thymus, gene segments encoding T-cell receptors rearrange to produce distinct receptors, and as a byproduct, some deleted DNA sequences form circular fragments inside the cell called signal joint TCR excision circles (sjTRECs). As the function of the thymus declines with age, so does the number of sjTRECs."

The actual paper is here: Estimating human age from T-cell DNA rearrangements

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14.0 years ago
Bio_X2Y ★ 4.4k

I don't think there's anything even remotely reliable for this, but maybe others can clarify.

It is unclear from your question whether you are interested in telomere lengths or telomerase. Telomerase is a molecular complex (containing an enzyme 'hTERT' and an RNA 'TERC') that extends the length of telomeres.

If you are referring to telomere lengths, there seem to be biological kits to measure these (google 'telomere length assay'). You probably won't be able to use these lengths to determine age. As far as I know, the correlation between telomere length and organism age is still very much controversial. If you take some cells from a human and culture them in vitro, the telomeres will shorten a bit at each mitosis, until eventually the population will senesce (stop dividing). Just because this happens for an individual cell line, however, doesn't automatically mean that older people will have shorter telomeres. My (very limited) understanding is that stem cells / progenitor cells within an organism express telomerase, so their telomeres are maintained at "full length", or perhaps shortening at a slower length. When a normal (non-stem) cell population in the body senesces, the stem cells/progenitors can be used to spawn fresh cells, where the telomere clock is effectively restarted. Some studies, like this one, have found that there is some correlation between age of the organism and the number of times a population of that organism's fibroblasts can undergo mitosis in culture (which presumably reflects telomere length). However, other studies, like this one, do not find a correlation, which would suggest that telomere lengths cannot be used to ascertain age.

If you are referring to telomerase, there are at least two ways you can investigate this from a bioinformatics perspective - you can attempt to quantify the amount of the hTERT protein in a sample (e.g. analysing mass spectrometry data of a protein digest), or you can attempt to quantify the amounts of hTERT mRNA and/or TERC in something like an RNA-Seq experiment. As above, however, this is highly unlikely to help you establish a person's age.

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13.9 years ago

Yes, there is an assay available for this and it is wet-lab based. So, this is not really the forum for this question. That said, we have considered this test for our longevity studies. Word is the test gives a wide range of age in human +/- 10 years. Thus, the test does not seem to be accurate enough for the poster's intended use of "proportion of your lifetime you have completed."

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13.7 years ago
Anima Mundi ★ 2.9k

The human myocardium accumulates lipofuscins and ceroids in an amount equal to 0,6% of its total intracellular volume per decade [1]. If you found a corpse, you could make an extract with Chl/EtOH from a known quantity of myocardium and titrate lipofuscins-ceroids via fluorimetry [1]. Thus, I suppose that if you had a table for compares between lipofuscins-ceroids quantities and ages you could assess the effective age of the corpse.

[1] = R. J. Henry, D. C. Cannon, J. W. Winkelman, Trattato di chimica analitica, a cura di G. Ceriotti, Piccin editore Padova, 1978.

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