Age-related clonal haemopoiesis is associated with increased epigenetic age

  • Robertson, Neil A.
  • Hillary, Robert F.
  • McCartney, Daniel L.
  • Terradas-Terradas, Maria
  • Higham, Jonathan
  • Sproul, Duncan
  • Deary, Ian J.
  • Kirschner, Kristina
  • Marioni, Riccardo E.
  • Chandra, Tamir
Publication date
August 2019
Publisher
Elsevier (Cell Press)

Abstract

Age-related clonal haemopoiesis (ARCH) in healthy individuals was initially observed through an increased skewing in X-chromosome inactivation [1]. More recently, several groups reported that ARCH is driven by somatic mutations [2], with the most prevalent ARCH mutations being in the DNMT3A and TET2 genes, previously described as drivers of myeloid malignancies. ARCH is associated with an increased risk for haematological cancers [2]. ARCH also confers an increased risk for non-haematological diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, atherosclerosis, and chronic ischemic heart failure, for which age is a main risk factor 3, 4. Whether ARCH is linked to accelerated ageing has remained unexplored. The most accurate and commonly used tools to ...

Extracted data

We use cookies to provide a better user experience.