2019
DOI: 10.1111/acel.13073
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Global metabolic profiling to model biological processes of aging in twins

Abstract: Aging is intimately linked to system‐wide metabolic changes that can be captured in blood. Understanding biological processes of aging in humans could help maintain a healthy aging trajectory and promote longevity. We performed untargeted plasma metabolomics quantifying 770 metabolites on a cross‐sectional cohort of 268 healthy individuals including 125 twin pairs covering human lifespan (from 6 months to 82 years). Unsupervised clustering of metabolic profiles revealed 6 main aging trajectories throughout lif… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Plasma metabolomic alterations have been reported during aging and heart disease in both humans and animal models (Bunning et al, 2020; Houtkooper et al, 2011; Johnson et al, 2018; McGarrah et al, 2018). Accordingly, we investigated whether age and myocardial ischemic injury may induce a combined effect on circulating metabolites.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Plasma metabolomic alterations have been reported during aging and heart disease in both humans and animal models (Bunning et al, 2020; Houtkooper et al, 2011; Johnson et al, 2018; McGarrah et al, 2018). Accordingly, we investigated whether age and myocardial ischemic injury may induce a combined effect on circulating metabolites.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wide metabolic changes in different organs occur during both aging and heart failure and, some of them can be captured with the assessment of circulating metabolites (Houtkooper et al, (2011); Bunning et al, 2020; McGarrah et al, 2018; Johnson et al, 2018; Lee et al, 2014; Zordoky et al, 2015; Chaleckis et al, 2016; Gonzalez‐Freire et al, 2019). However, in the clinical setting, it may be complicated to study whether some of those metabolic alterations were influenced by additional diseases as several older adults especially with heart dysfunction show multiple comorbidities (Dharmarajan & Dunlay, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…All the hallmarks of aging may be expected to have detectable effects on the metabolome and overlap significantly with the effects of metabolic disorders [ 6 ]. The metabolomic study of age is an active area with many important recent contributions [ 7 ], including the development of a searchable database of age-associated metabolites [ 8 ]. However large challenges in the field remain including comparability and reproducibility across studies, metabolome coverage and metabolite annotation.…”
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confidence: 99%