Proteomic architecture of frailty across the spectrum of cardiovascular disease

While frailty is a prominent risk factor in an aging population, the underlying biology of frailty is incompletely described. Here, we integrate 979 circulating proteins across a wide range of physiologies with 12 measures of frailty in a prospective discovery cohort of 809 individuals with severe a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aging cell 2023-11, Vol.22 (11), p.e13978
Hauptverfasser: Perry, Andrew S, Zhao, Shilin, Gajjar, Priya, Murthy, Venkatesh L, Lehallier, Benoit, Miller, Patricia, Nair, Sangeeta, Neill, Colin, Carr, J Jeffrey, Fearon, William, Kapadia, Samir, Kumbhani, Dharam, Gillam, Linda, Lindenfeld, JoAnn, Farrell, Laurie, Marron, Megan M, Tian, Qu, Newman, Anne B, Murabito, Joanne, Gerszten, Robert E, Nayor, Matthew, Elmariah, Sammy, Lindman, Brian R, Shah, Ravi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:While frailty is a prominent risk factor in an aging population, the underlying biology of frailty is incompletely described. Here, we integrate 979 circulating proteins across a wide range of physiologies with 12 measures of frailty in a prospective discovery cohort of 809 individuals with severe aortic stenosis (AS) undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation. Our aim was to characterize the proteomic architecture of frailty in a highly susceptible population and study its relation to clinical outcome and systems-wide phenotypes to define potential novel, clinically relevant frailty biology. Proteomic signatures (specifically of physical function) were related to post-intervention outcome in AS, specifying pathways of innate immunity, cell growth/senescence, fibrosis/metabolism, and a host of proteins not widely described in human aging. In published cohorts, the "frailty proteome" displayed heterogeneous trajectories across age (20-100 years, age only explaining a small fraction of variance) and were associated with cardiac and non-cardiac phenotypes and outcomes across two broad validation cohorts (N > 35,000) over ≈2-3 decades. These findings suggest the importance of precision biomarkers of underlying multi-organ health status in age-related morbidity and frailty.
ISSN:1474-9718
1474-9726
1474-9726
DOI:10.1111/acel.13978