Anne B Newman's research while affiliated with University of Pittsburgh and other places

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Publications (806)


Associations between toxicity-weighted concentrations and dementia risk: Results from the Cardiovascular Health Cognition Study
  • Article

June 2024

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6 Reads

The Science of The Total Environment

Breanna M Crane

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Probability of mortality within 5-years of follow-up according to ALM index, grip strength and gait speed. ALM Appendicular lean mass. Contour plots were estimated separately among men and women using logistic regression models with the following exposure variables: ALM index, grip strength, gait speed and age as linear terms. Contour plots were estimated at the mean age of the sex-pooled analysis sample
Predictive value of sarcopenia components for all-cause mortality: findings from population-based cohorts
  • Article
  • Full-text available

June 2024

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89 Reads

Aging Clinical and Experimental Research

Background Low grip strength and gait speed are associated with mortality. However, investigation of the additional mortality risk explained by these measures, over and above other factors, is limited. Aim We examined whether grip strength and gait speed improve discriminative capacity for mortality over and above more readily obtainable clinical risk factors. Methods Participants from the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study, Osteoporotic Fractures in Men Study, and the Hertfordshire Cohort Study were analysed. Appendicular lean mass (ALM) was ascertained using DXA; muscle strength by grip dynamometry; and usual gait speed over 2.4–6 m. Verified deaths were recorded. Associations between sarcopenia components and mortality were examined using Cox regression with cohort as a random effect; discriminative capacity was assessed using Harrell’s Concordance Index (C-index). Results Mean (SD) age of participants (n = 8362) was 73.8(5.1) years; 5231(62.6%) died during a median follow-up time of 13.3 years. Grip strength (hazard ratio (95% CI) per SD decrease: 1.14 (1.10,1.19)) and gait speed (1.21 (1.17,1.26)), but not ALM index (1.01 (0.95,1.06)), were associated with mortality in mutually-adjusted models after accounting for age, sex, BMI, smoking status, alcohol consumption, physical activity, ethnicity, education, history of fractures and falls, femoral neck bone mineral density (BMD), self-rated health, cognitive function and number of comorbidities. However, a model containing only age and sex as exposures gave a C-index (95% CI) of 0.65(0.64,0.66), which only increased to 0.67(0.67,0.68) after inclusion of grip strength and gait speed. Conclusions Grip strength and gait speed may generate only modest adjunctive risk information for mortality compared with other more readily obtainable risk factors.

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Higher expression of denervation‐responsive genes is negatively associated with muscle volume and performance traits in the study of muscle, mobility, and aging (SOMMA)

June 2024

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19 Reads

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1 Citation

Aging Cell

Aging Cell

With aging skeletal muscle fibers undergo repeating cycles of denervation and reinnervation. In approximately the 8th decade of life reinnervation no longer keeps pace, resulting in the accumulation of persistently denervated muscle fibers that in turn cause an acceleration of muscle dysfunction. The significance of denervation in important clinical outcomes with aging is poorly studied. The Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging (SOMMA) is a large cohort study with the primary objective to assess how aging muscle biology impacts clinically important traits. Using transcriptomics data from vastus lateralis muscle biopsies in 575 participants we have selected 49 denervation‐responsive genes to provide insights to the burden of denervation in SOMMA, to test the hypothesis that greater expression of denervation‐responsive genes negatively associates with SOMMA participant traits that included time to walk 400 meters, fitness (VO2peak), maximal mitochondrial respiration, muscle mass and volume, and leg muscle strength and power. Consistent with our hypothesis, increased transcript levels of: a calciumdependent intercellular adhesion glycoprotein (CDH15), acetylcholine receptor subunits (CHRNA1, CHRND, CHRNE), a glycoprotein promoting reinnervation (NCAM1), a transcription factor regulating aspects of muscle organization (RUNX1), and a sodium channel (SCN5A) were each negatively associated with at least 3 of these traits. VO2peak and maximal respiration had the strongest negative associations with 15 and 19 denervation‐responsive genes, respectively. In conclusion, the abundance of denervationresponsive gene transcripts is a significant determinant of muscle and mobility outcomes in aging humans, supporting the imperative to identify new treatment strategies to restore innervation in advanced age.


Table 2 (continued)
Associations between 26 shared metabolites of cognitive decline and gait decline and dementia risk
Shared plasma metabolomic profiles of cognitive and mobility decline predict future dementia

June 2024

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8 Reads

GeroScience

Experiencing decline in both cognition and mobility is associated with a substantially higher dementia risk than cognitive decline only. Metabolites associated with both cognitive and mobility declines may be early predictors of dementia and reveal specific pathways to dementia. We analyzed data from 2450 participants initially free of dementia who had 613 metabolites measured in plasma in 1998–1999 (mean age = 75.2 ± 2.9 years old, 37.8% Black, 50% women) from the Health, Aging and Body Composition study. Dementia diagnosis was determined by race-specific decline in 3MS scores, medication use, and hospital records through 2014. Cognition and mobility were repeatedly measured using 3MS and a 20-m walking test up to 10 years, respectively. We examined metabolite associations with changes in 3MS (n = 2046) and gait speed (n = 2019) using multivariable linear regression adjusted for age, sex, race, and baseline performance and examined metabolite associations with dementia risk using Cox regression. During a mean follow-up of 9.3 years, 534 (21.8%) participants developed dementia. On average, 3MS declined 0.47/year and gait declined 0.04 m/sec/year. After covariate adjustment, 75 metabolites were associated with cognitive decline, and 111 metabolites were associated with gait decline (FDR-adjusted p < 0.05). Twenty-six metabolites were associated with both cognitive and gait declines. Eighteen of 26 metabolites were associated with dementia risk (p < 0.05), notably amino acids, glycerophospholipids (lysoPCs, PCs, PEs), and sphingolipids. Results remained similar after adjusting for cardiovascular disease or apolipoprotein E ɛ4 carrier status. During aging, metabolomic profiles of cognitive decline and mobility decline show distinct and shared signatures. Shared metabolomic profiles suggest that inflammation and deficits in mitochondria and the urea cycle in addition to the central nervous system may play key roles in both cognitive and mobility declines and predict dementia. Future studies are warranted to investigate longitudinal metabolite changes and metabolomic markers with dementia pathologies.


Associations between regional adipose tissue distribution and skeletal muscle bioenergetics in older men and women

May 2024

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32 Reads

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1 Citation

Obesity

Objective The aim of this study was to examine associations of ectopic adipose tissue (AT) with skeletal muscle (SM) mitochondrial bioenergetics in older adults. Methods Cross‐sectional data from 829 adults ≥70 years of age were used. Abdominal, subcutaneous, and visceral AT and thigh muscle fat infiltration (MFI) were quantified by magnetic resonance imaging. SM mitochondrial energetics were characterized in vivo ( ³¹ P‐magnetic resonance spectroscopy; ATP max ) and ex vivo (high‐resolution respirometry maximal oxidative phosphorylation [OXPHOS]). ActivPal was used to measure physical activity ([PA]; step count). Linear regression adjusted for covariates was applied, with sequential adjustment for BMI and PA. Results Independent of BMI, total abdominal AT (standardized [Std.] β = −0.21; R ² = 0.09) and visceral AT (Std. β = −0.16; R ² = 0.09) were associated with ATP max ( p < 0.01; n = 770) but not following adjustment for PA ( p ≥ 0.05; n = 658). Visceral AT (Std. β = −0.16; R ² = 0.25) and thigh MFI (Std. β = −0.11; R ² = 0.24) were associated with carbohydrate‐supported maximal OXPHOS independent of BMI and PA ( p < 0.05; n = 609). Total abdominal AT (Std. β = −0.19; R ² = 0.24) and visceral AT (Std. β = −0.17; R ² = 0.24) were associated with fatty acid‐supported maximal OXPHOS independent of BMI and PA ( p < 0.05; n = 447). Conclusions Skeletal MFI and abdominal visceral, but not subcutaneous, AT are inversely associated with SM mitochondrial bioenergetics in older adults independent of BMI. Associations between ectopic AT and in vivo mitochondrial bioenergetics are attenuated by PA.


Sex Differences in the Association between Skeletal Muscle Energetics and Perceived Physical Fatigability: The Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA)

May 2024

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23 Reads

Greater perceived physical fatigability and lower skeletal muscle energetics are predictors of mobility decline. Characterizing associations between muscle energetics and perceived fatigability may provide insight into potential targets to prevent mobility decline. We examined associations of in vivo (maximal ATP production, ATPmax) and ex vivo (maximal carbohydrate supported oxidative phosphorylation [max OXPHOS] and maximal fatty acid supported OXPHOS [max FAO OXPHOS]) measures of mitochondrial energetics with two measures of perceived physical fatigability, Pittsburgh Fatigability Scale (PFS, 0-50, higher=greater) and Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE Fatigability, 6-20, higher=greater) after a slow treadmill walk. Participants from the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (N=873) were 76.3 ± 5.0 years old, 59.2% women, and 85.3% White. Higher muscle energetics (both in vivo and ex vivo) were associated with lower perceived physical fatigability, all p<0.03. When stratified by sex, higher ATPmax was associated with lower PFS Physical for men only; higher max OXPHOS and max FAO OXPHOS were associated with lower RPE fatigability for both sexes. Higher skeletal muscle energetics were associated with 40-55% lower odds of being in the most (PFS Physical ≥25, RPE Fatigability ≥12) vs least (PFS 0-4, RPE Fatigability 6-7) severe fatigability strata, all p<0.03. Being a woman was associated with 2-3 times higher odds of being in the most severe fatigability strata when controlling for ATPmax but not the in vivo measures (p<0.05). Better mitochondrial energetics were linked to lower fatigability and less severe fatigability in older adults. Findings imply that improving skeletal muscle energetics may mitigate perceived physical fatigability and prolong healthy aging.


End of Life Events and Causes of Death in Danish Long-Lived Siblings: Reduced Dementia Risk Compared to Sporadic Long-Livers

May 2024

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17 Reads

Journal of Alzheimer's disease: JAD

Background: Better physical robustness and resilience of long-lived siblings compared to sporadic long-livers has been demonstrated in several studies. However, it is unknown whether long-lived siblings also end their lives better. Objective: To investigate end-of-life (EoL) events (dementia diagnosis, medication, hospitalizations in the last 5 years of life), causes of death, and location of death in long-lived siblings compared to matched sporadic long-livers from the Danish population. Methods: Long-lived siblings were identified through three nationwide Danish studies in which the inclusion criteria varied, but 99.5% of the families had at least two siblings surviving to age 90 + . Those who died between 2006 and 2018 were included, and randomly matched with sex, year-of-birth and age-at-death controls (i.e., sporadic long-lived controls) from the Danish population. Results: A total of 5,262 long-lived individuals were included (1,754 long-lived siblings, 3,508 controls; 63% women; median age at death 96.1). Long-lived siblings had a significantly lower risk of being diagnosed with dementia in the last years of life (p = 0.027). There was no significant difference regarding the number of prescribed drugs, hospital stays, days in hospital, and location of death. Compared to controls, long-lived siblings presented a lower risk of dying from dementia (p = 0.020) and ill-defined conditions (p = 0.030). Conclusions: In many aspects long-lived siblings end their lives similar to sporadic long-livers, with the important exception of lower dementia risk during the last 5 years of life. These results suggest that long-lived siblings are excellent candidates for identifying environmental and genetic protective factors of dementia.


Participant inclusions. SOMMA participants selected for cross‐sectional analyses.
Significant associations of autophagy genes with mitochondrial function, physical performance, and muscle mass measures. Heat map capturing top 20 statistically significant (p < 0.05 FDR adjusted) genes identified by our models: each color represents positive (red) or negative (blue) associations.
Associations with Max OXPHOS. Volcano plot capturing all statistically significant (p < 0.05 FDR adjusted) genes identified by our models: Each dot represents a gene; the dot color indicates significance level. Base model: gene expression~ Max OXPHOS + age + gender + clinic site + race/ethnicity + height + weight + physical activities + multimorbidity count + sequencing batch.
Associations with VO2 peak. Volcano plot capturing all statistically significant (p < 0.05 FDR adjusted) genes identified by our models: Each dot represents a gene; the dot color indicates significance level. Base model: gene expression~ VO2 Peak + age + gender + clinic site + race/ethnicity + height + weight + physical activities + multimorbidity count + sequencing batch.
Associations with 400 m Walk Speed. Volcano plot capturing all statistically significant (p < 0.05 FDR adjusted) genes identified by our models: Each dot represents a gene; the dot color indicates significance level. Base model: gene expression~ walk speed + age + gender + clinic site + race/ethnicity + height + weight + physical activities + multimorbidity count + sequencing batch.
Autophagy gene expression in skeletal muscle of older individuals is associated with physical performance, muscle volume and mitochondrial function in the study of muscle, mobility and aging (SOMMA)

April 2024

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126 Reads

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1 Citation

Aging Cell

Aging Cell

Autophagy is essential for proteostasis, energetic balance, and cell defense and is a key pathway in aging. Identifying associations between autophagy gene expression patterns in skeletal muscle and physical performance outcomes would further our knowledge of mechanisms related with proteostasis and healthy aging. Muscle biopsies were obtained from participants in the Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging (SOMMA). For 575 participants, RNA was sequenced and expression of 281 genes related to autophagy regulation, mitophagy, and mTOR/upstream pathways was determined. Associations between gene expression and outcomes including mitochondrial respiration in muscle fiber bundles (MAX OXPHOS), physical performance (VO2 peak, 400 m walking speed, and leg power), and thigh muscle volume, were determined using negative binomial regression models. For autophagy, key transcriptional regulators including TFE3 and NFKB‐related genes (RELA, RELB, and NFKB1) were negatively associated with outcomes. On the contrary, regulators of oxidative metabolism that also promote overall autophagy, mitophagy, and pexophagy (PPARGC1A, PPARA, and EPAS1) were positively associated with multiple outcomes. In line with this, several mitophagy, fusion, and fission‐related genes (NIPSNAP2, DNM1L, and OPA1) were also positively associated with outcomes. For mTOR pathway and related genes, expression of WDR59 and WDR24, both subunits of GATOR2 complex (an indirect inhibitor of mTORC1), and PRKAG3, which is a regulatory subunit of AMPK, were negatively correlated with multiple outcomes. Our study identifies autophagy and selective autophagy such as mitophagy gene expression patterns in human skeletal muscle related to physical performance, muscle volume, and mitochondrial function in older persons which may lead to target identification to preserve mobility and independence.


Muscle mitochondrial bioenergetic capacities are associated with multimorbidity burden in older adults: the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA)

April 2024

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17 Reads

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1 Citation

The Journals of Gerontology Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences

Background The geroscience hypothesis posits that aging biological processes contribute to many age-related deficits, including the accumulation of multiple chronic diseases. Though only one facet of mitochondrial function, declines in muscle mitochondrial bioenergetic capacities may contribute to this increased susceptibility to multimorbidity. Methods The Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA) assessed ex vivo muscle mitochondrial energetics in 764 older adults (mean age =76.4, 56.5% women, 85.9% non-Hispanic white) by high-resolution respirometry of permeabilized muscle fibers. We estimated the proportional odds ratio (POR [95%CI]) for the likelihood of greater multimorbidity (four levels: 0 conditions, N=332; 1 condition, N=299; 2 conditions, N=98; or 3+ conditions, N=35) from an index of 11 conditions, per SD decrement in muscle mitochondrial energetic parameters. Distribution of conditions allowed for testing the associations of maximal muscle energetics with some individual conditions. Results Lower oxidative phosphorylation supported by fatty acids and/or complex-I and -II linked carbohydrates (e.g., Max OXPHOSCI+CII) was associated with a greater multimorbidity index score (POR=1.32[1.13,1.54]) and separately with diabetes mellitus (OR=1.62[1.26,2.09]), depressive symptoms (OR=1.45[1.04,2.00]) and possibly chronic kidney disease (OR=1.57[0.98,2.52]) but not significantly with other conditions (e.g., cardiac arrhythmia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). Conclusions Lower muscle mitochondrial bioenergetic capacities was associated with a worse composite multimorbidity index score. Our results suggest that decrements in muscle mitochondrial energetics may contribute to a greater global burden of disease and is more strongly related to some conditions than others.


Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing in a Prospective Multicenter Cohort of Older Adults

April 2024

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18 Reads

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2 Citations

Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise

ABSTRACT Purpose: Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) measured by peak oxygen consumption (VO2peak) declines with aging and correlates with mortality and morbidity. Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing (CPET) is the criterion method to assess CRF, but its feasibility, validity and reliability in older adults is unclear. Our objective was to design and implement a dependable, safe and reliable CPET protocol in older adults. Methods: VO2peak was measured by CPET, performed using treadmill exercise in 875 adults ≥70 years in the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA). The protocol included a symptom-limited peak (maximal) exercise and two submaximal walking speeds. An adjudication process was in place to review tests for validity if they met any prespecified criteria [VO2peak <12.0 ml/kg/min; maximum heart rate (HR) <100 bpm; respiratory exchange ratio (RER) <1.05 and a rating of perceived exertion <15]. A subset (N=30) performed a repeat test to assess reproducibility. Results: CPET was safe and well tolerated, with 95.8% of participants able to complete the VO2peak phase of the protocol. Only 56 (6.4%) participants had a risk alert and only two adverse events occurred: a fall and atrial fibrillation. Mean  SD VO2peak was 20.2 ± 4.8 mL/kg/min, peak HR 142 ± 18 bpm, and peak RER 1.14 ± 0.09. Adjudication was indicated in 47 tests; 20 were evaluated as valid, 27 as invalid (18 data collection errors, 9 did not reach VO2peak). Reproducibility of VO2peak was high (intraclass correlation coefficient=0.97). Conclusions: CPET was feasible, effective and safe for older adults, including many with multimorbidity or frailty. These data support a broader implementation of CPET to provide insight into the role of CRF and its underlying determinants of aging and age-related conditions. Key Words: AGING, CARDIORESPIRATORY FITNESS, FRAILTY, MUSCLE, VO2PEAK


Citations (49)


... Aging in skeletal muscle is associated with recurring cycles of denervation and reinnervation, but during aging the rate of reinnervation can no longer keep pace leading to accumulation of persistently denervated muscle fibers that eventually is manifested clinically as muscle fiber and whole muscle atrophy. Using the muscle gene expression data, Lukasiewicz et al. (2024) showed that transcripts that increase with denervation were associated with poorer mobility along with reduced muscle volume. ...

Reference:

The cellular bases of mobility from the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA)
Higher expression of denervation‐responsive genes is negatively associated with muscle volume and performance traits in the study of muscle, mobility, and aging (SOMMA)
Aging Cell

Aging Cell

... Using the gene expression data from muscle in SOMMA, Coen et al. (2024) found that expression of genes involved in autophagy was associated tests of mobility, fitness and strength and also mitochondrial energetics. Autophagy is the cellular process of lysosomal degradation and recycling of damaged cytoplasmic components, including mitochondria (mitophagy) to maintain cellular homeostasis (Picca et al., 2023;Sandri, 2010). ...

Autophagy gene expression in skeletal muscle of older individuals is associated with physical performance, muscle volume and mitochondrial function in the study of muscle, mobility and aging (SOMMA)
Aging Cell

Aging Cell

... Skeletal muscle from models of aging-associated muscle disorders demonstrates comparable mitochondrial shifts to those seen in both the aging and failing heart, all of which are generally associated with reduced mitochondrial performance or deleterious mitochondrial signaling to other organelles. These changes include reduced total mitochondrial content [82] , mitochondrial structural remodeling [83] , altered energetics [84] and reduced maximal bioenergetic capacity [85] , increased mitochondrial oxidative stress and dysregulated redox signaling [86,87] , reduced mitochondrial protein quality control [80] , and increased mitochondria-associated inflammation [84,88] . These broad similarities to mitochondrial changes between the failing heart and aging skeletal muscle suggest significant overlap in mitochondrial pathophysiology. ...

Muscle mitochondrial bioenergetic capacities are associated with multimorbidity burden in older adults: the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA)
  • Citing Article
  • April 2024

The Journals of Gerontology Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences

... measured using a metabolic cart (Medgraphics Ultima Series, Medgraphics Corporation, St.Paul, MN) and facemask.29 Immediately after the end of the Phase 3 test, participants were asked to rate their perceived exertion using the Borg RPE scale (range 6-20, higher scores = greater RPE Fatigability).30 ...

Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing in a Prospective Multicenter Cohort of Older Adults
  • Citing Article
  • April 2024

Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise

... This finding is congruent with reports that higher levels of circulating inflammatory mediators are associated with poor mobility in older adults (Penninx et al., 2004). While we have not probed markers of inflammation in this SOMMA dataset, we note that a separate analysis supports the concept that older adults with higher fitness/respiration/walking speed also have lower oxidative stress (Day et al., 2024;Tranah et al., 2023). ...

Signatures of cysteine oxidation on muscle structural and contractile proteins are associated with physical performance and muscle function in older adults: Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA)
Aging Cell

Aging Cell

... New evidence from the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA) revealed sex differences in skeletal muscle energetics, where in vivo and ex vivo muscle energetics were significantly higher in men compared to women. 15 Furthermore, substrate utilization during exercise may differ by sex with women reported to have a greater reliance on fatty acid oxidation to produce ATP, while men have a greater reliance on carbohydrate driven oxidation. 16,17 Thus, ex vivo respiratory measures that capture ATP production from both fatty acid oxidation and carbohydrates may distinguish key physiological differences that determine sex-specific clinical domains. ...

Skeletal muscle energetics explain the sex disparity in mobility impairment in the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA)
  • Citing Article
  • December 2023

The Journals of Gerontology Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences

... Furthermore, Mao et al. (2023) carried out a longitudinal study following the eating patterns of 828 elderly individuals, aiming to highlight the fundamental role of chrononutrition in body composition and its effect on muscular health. Using magnetic resonance imaging, eating later in the day with longer eating windows was found to be associated with greater muscle mass in older adults. ...

The association between chrononutrition behaviors and muscle health among older adults: The study of muscle, mobility and aging
Aging Cell

Aging Cell

... In the past decade, GWAS have made significant advancements in identifying genetic variants associated with CAD 8,45,46 . However, the translation of this knowledge into functional validation and mechanistic insights remains a challenging task. ...

Whole-genome sequencing uncovers two loci for coronary artery calcification and identifies ARSE as a regulator of vascular calcification
  • Citing Article
  • December 2023

Nature Cardiovascular Research

... Such an approach could leverage recent statistical methods designed to analyze associations between rare functional variants and common diseases [35][36][37]. Ultimately, this would contribute to improving the accuracy of CAD risk prediction [38,39]. ...

Type 2 Diabetes Modifies the Association of CAD Genomic Risk Variants With Subclinical Atherosclerosis
  • Citing Article
  • November 2023

Circulation Genomic and Precision Medicine

... Skeletal muscle mitochondrial energetics have been linked to a range of aging health indicators, including lower-extremity physical function, 13 mobility, 12,15 decreased fitness, [13][14][15] and frailty. 16,17 Beyond muscle, a recent study of monocytes from older adults (55-94 years) showed that agerelated downregulation of mitochondrial genes associated with multimorbidity burden. 18 Ageassociated decreases in mitochondrial bioenergetic capacities have been reported in multiple tissues: these organism wide decrements support the notion that it could majorly contribute to age-related diseases. ...

Lower muscle mitochondrial energetics is associated with greater phenotypic frailty in older women and men: the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging
  • Citing Article
  • November 2023

GeroScience