Scientist Uncovers Internal Clock Able to Measure Age of Most Human Tissues; Women's Breast Tissue Ages Faster Than Rest of Body
Oct. 20, 2013 — Everyone
grows older, but scientists don't really understand why. Now a UCLA
study has uncovered a biological clock embedded in our genomes that may
shed light on why our bodies age and how we can slow the process.
Published in the Oct. 21 edition of Genome Biology, the findings could offer valuable insights into cancer and stem cell research.
A newly discovered biological clock measures aging throughout the body. (Credit: UCLA/Horvath lab)
While earlier clocks have been linked to saliva, hormones and
telomeres, the new research is the first to identify an internal
timepiece able to accurately gauge the age of diverse human organs,
tissues and cell types. Unexpectedly, the clock also found that some
parts of the anatomy, like a woman's breast tissue, age faster than the
rest of the body.
"To fight aging, we first need an objective way of measuring it.
Pinpointing a set of biomarkers that keeps time throughout the body has
been a four-year challenge," explained Steve Horvath, a professor of
human genetics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and of
biostatistics at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. "My goal in
inventing this clock is to help scientists improve their understanding
of what speeds up and slows down the human aging process."
To create the clock, Horvath focused on methylation, a naturally
occurring process that chemically alters DNA. Horvath sifted through 121
sets of data collected previously by researchers who had studied
methylation in both healthy and cancerous human tissue.
Gleaning information from nearly 8,000 samples of 51 types of tissue
and cells taken from throughout the body, Horvath charted how age
affects DNA methylation levels from pre-birth through 101 years. To
create the clock, he zeroed in on 353 markers that change with age and
are present throughout the body.
Horvath tested the clock's effectiveness by comparing a tissue's
biological age to its chronological age. When the clock repeatedly
proved accurate, he was thrilled -- and a little stunned.
"It's surprising that one could develop a clock that reliably keeps
time across the human anatomy," he admitted. "My approach really
compared apples and oranges, or in this case, very different parts of
the body: the brain, heart, lungs, liver, kidney and cartilage."
While most samples' biological ages matched their chronological ages,
others diverged significantly. For example, Horvath discovered that a
woman's breast tissue ages faster than the rest of her body.
"Healthy breast tissue is about two to three years older than the
rest of a woman's body," said Horvath. "If a woman has breast cancer,
the healthy tissue next to the tumor is an average of 12 years older
than the rest of her body."
The results may explain why breast cancer is the most common cancer
in women. Given that the clock ranked tumor tissue an average of 36
years older than healthy tissue, it could also explain why age is a
major risk factor for many cancers in both genders.
Horvath next looked at pluripotent stem cells, adult cells that have
been reprogrammed to an embryonic stem cell-like state, enabling them to
form any type of cell in the body and continue dividing indefinitely.
"My research shows that all stem cells are newborns," he said. "More
importantly, the process of transforming a person's cells into
pluripotent stem cells resets the cells' clock to zero."
In principle, the discovery proves that scientists can rewind the body's biological clock and restore it to zero.
"The big question is whether the biological clock controls a process
that leads to aging," Horvath said. "If so, the clock will become an
important biomarker for studying new therapeutic approaches to keeping
us young."
Finally, Horvath discovered that the clock's rate speeds up or slows down depending on a person's age.
"The clock's ticking rate isn't constant," he explained. "It ticks
much faster when we're born and growing from children into teenagers,
then slows to a constant rate when we reach 20."
In an unexpected finding, the cells of children with progeria, a
genetic disorder that causes premature aging, appeared normal and
reflected their true chronological age.
UCLA has filed a provisional patent on Horvath's clock. His next
studies will examine whether stopping the body's aging clock halts the
aging process--or increases cancer risk. He'll also explore whether a
similar clock exists in mice.
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