Elsevier

Neurobiology of Aging

Volume 55, July 2017, Pages 167-171
Neurobiology of Aging

Brief communication
Maintained memory in aging is associated with young epigenetic age

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2017.02.009Get rights and content
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open access

Abstract

Epigenetic alterations during aging have been proposed to contribute to decline in physical and cognitive functions, and accelerated epigenetic aging has been associated with disease and all-cause mortality later in life. In this study, we estimated epigenetic age dynamics in groups with different memory trajectories (maintained high performance, average decline, and accelerated decline) over a 15-year period. Epigenetic (DNA-methylation [DNAm]) age was assessed, and delta age (DNAm age − chronological age) was calculated in blood samples at baseline (age: 55–65 years) and 15 years later in 52 age- and gender-matched individuals from the Betula study in Sweden. A lower delta DNAm age was observed for those with maintained memory functions compared with those with average (p = 0.035) or accelerated decline (p = 0.037). Moreover, separate analyses revealed that DNAm age at follow-up, but not chronologic age, was a significant predictor of dementia (p = 0.019). Our findings suggest that young epigenetic age contributes to maintained memory in aging.

Keywords

Epigenetic age
DNA-methylation
Episodic memory
Dementia
Aging
Longitudinal study

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