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Body weight, hormones and T cell subsets as predictors of life span in genetically heterogeneous mice

Authors :
James M. Harper
Andrzej T. Galecki
Richard A. Miller
David T. Burke
Source :
Mechanisms of ageing and development. 125(5)
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Previous studies have shown that T cell subset levels, early life body weight, and levels of leptin and thyroid hormones can each serve, independently, as predictors of life span in populations of genetically heterogeneous mice. New data now confirm, in a replicate cohort, that T cell subset patterns predict longevity, and show that they can do so when measured in mice as young as 8 months of age. Individual T cell subsets, as well as composite indices that combine data from two or more T cell measures at 8 or 18 months, can be combined with 3- and 9-month body weight data to provide better prediction of life span than either immune or weight measures alone. Mice whose immune and weight measures are both in the lowest quartile have mean and maximal life spans that are 18% and 16-25% higher, respectively, than mice in the opposite quartiles for both traits. Thyroxine levels measured at 4 months lead to further improvement over models that combine weight and immune data only. A genome scan provided evidence for loci on chromosomes 2, 12, 13, and 17 that modulate age-sensitive T cell subset patterns at both 8 and 18 months of age. These data show that late-life mortality risks are influenced to a measurable degree by factors that modulate growth trajectory and hormone and immune status in the first third of the life span, and provide clues as to which early life systems deserve further scrutiny as potential mediators of late life disease risk.

Details

ISSN :
00476374
Volume :
125
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mechanisms of ageing and development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c7bd2821749d386c94728298af598652