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The multiomics blueprint of the individual with the most extreme lifespan

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posted on 2025-11-10, 11:49 authored by E Santos-Pujol, A Noguera-Castells, M Casado-Pelaez, CA García-Prieto, C Vasallo, I Campillo-Marcos, C Quero-Dotor, E Crespo-García, A Bueno-Costa, F Setién, G Ferrer, V Davalos, E Mereu, R Pluvinet, C Arribas, CDL Torre, F Villavicencio, L Sumoy, I Granada, NS Coles, P Acha, F Solé, M Mallo, C Mata, S Peregrina, T Gabaldón, M Llirós, M Pujolassos, R Carreras-Torres, A Lluansí, LJ García-Gil, X Aldeguer, S Samino, P Torné, J Ribalta, M Guardiola, N Amigó, O Yanes, P Martínez, R Sánchez-Vázquez, MA Blasco, J Oviedo, B Lemos, J Rius-Bonet, M Torrubiano, M Massip-Salcedo, KA Khidir, TH Cao, PA Quinn, DJL Jones, Salvador Macip MaresmaSalvador Macip Maresma, E Brigos-Barril, M Moldes, F Barteri, G Muntané, H Laayouni, A Navarro, M Esteller
Extreme human lifespan, exemplified by supercentenarians, presents a paradox in understanding aging: despite advanced age, they maintain relatively good health. To investigate this duality, we have performed a high-throughput multiomics study of the world’s oldest living person, interrogating her genome, transcriptome, metabolome, proteome, microbiome, and epigenome, comparing the results with larger matched cohorts. The emerging picture highlights different pathways attributed to each process: the record-breaking advanced age is manifested by telomere attrition, abnormal B cell population, and clonal hematopoiesis, whereas absence of typical age-associated diseases is associated with rare European-population genetic variants, low inflammation levels, a rejuvenated bacteriome, and a younger epigenome. These findings provide a fresh look at human aging biology, suggesting biomarkers for healthy aging, and potential strategies to increase life expectancy. The extrapolation of our results to the general population will require larger cohorts and longitudinal prospective studies to design potential anti-aging interventions.<p></p>

History

Author affiliation

University of Leicester College of Life Sciences Biological & Biomedical Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Cell Reports Medicine

Volume

6

Issue

10

Pagination

102368

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

2666-3791

eissn

2666-3791

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-11-10

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

Deposited by

Professor Salvador Macip Maresma

Deposit date

2025-11-02

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