Title: Biodemography of Human Longevity
1Biodemography of Human Longevity
- Dr. Natalia S. Gavrilova, Ph.D.
-
- Center on Aging,
- NORC and the University of Chicago,
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
2Three scientific problems
- Mechanisms of familial transmission of human
longevity - Paradox of low heritability of lifespan vs
high familial clustering of longevity - Parental-age effects (accumulation of mutation
load in parental germ cells) - Does progeny conceived to older parents
live shorter lives? - Does exceptional human longevity come with high
cost of infertility? - Testing the evolutionary theories of aging
3The Heritability of Life-Spans Is SmallC.E.
Finch, R.E. Tanzi, Science, 1997, p.407
Paradox of low heritability of lifespan vs high
familial clustering of longevity
long life runs in families A. Cournil, T.B.L.
Kirkwood, Trends in Genetics, 2001, p.233
4Heritability Estimates of Human Lifespan
Author(s) Heritability estimate Population
McGue et al., 1993 0.22 Danish twins
Ljungquist et al., 1998 lt0.33 Swedish twins
Bocquet-Appel, Jacobi, 1990 0.10-0.30 French village
Mayer, 1991 0.10-0.33 New England families
Gavrilova et al., 1998 0.18 European aristocracy
Cournil et al., 2000 0.27 French village
Mitchell et al., 2001 0.25 Old Order Amish
5Early Study on Familial Longevity
- This study found that the relatives of
nonagenarians and centenarians live longer than
relatives of shorter-lived individuals - These findings were confirmed in later studies
(Gudmundsson et al., 2000 Perls et al., 2002 and
others )
6The Best Possible Source on Familial Longevity -
Genealogies of European Royal and Noble Families
Marie-Antoinette von Habsburg-Lothringen
(1765-1793)
Charles IX dAnguleme (1550-1574)
Henry VIII Tudor (1491-1547)
7Characteristic of our Dataset
- Over 16,000 persons belonging to the European
aristocracy - 1800-1880 extinct birth cohorts
- Adult persons aged 30
- Data extracted from the professional genealogical
data sources including Genealogisches Handbook
des Adels, Almanac de Gotha, Burke Peerage and
Baronetage.
8Daughter's Lifespan(Mean Deviation from Cohort
Life Expectancy)as a Function of Paternal
Lifespan
- Offspring data for adult lifespan (30 years) are
smoothed by 5-year running average. - Extinct birth cohorts (born in 1800-1880)
- European aristocratic families. 6,443
cases
9Unusual Non-linear Pattern of Lifespan Inheritance
- It is theoretically predicted (by quantitative
genetics) and experimentally confirmed that the
dependence of most offspring quantitative traits
(body weight for example) on parental traits is
linear. - However, if some parents are damaged during early
development and therefore have shorter lifespan
(despite having normal germ cell DNA), the
dependence for lifespan inheritance should become
non-linear. - This is because the offspring born to these
short-lived parents with normal germ cell DNA
should have normal rather than shorter lifespan
10Is the effect of non-linear inheritance remain
valid after controlling for other explanatory
variables?
- Lifespan of other parent
- Parental ages at childs conception
- Ethnicity
- Month of birth
11Offspring Lifespan at Age 30 as a Function
of Paternal LifespanData are adjusted for
other predictor variables
Daughters, 8,284 cases
Sons, 8,322 cases
12Offspring Lifespan at Age 30 as a Function
of Maternal LifespanData are adjusted for
other predictor variables
Daughters, 8,284 cases
Sons, 8,322 cases
13Is the effect of non-linear inheritance valid at
older ages?
(Offspring survival after age 60)
14Offspring Lifespan at Age 60 as a Function
of Paternal LifespanData are adjusted for
other predictor variables
Daughters, 6,517 cases
Sons, 5,419 cases
15Offspring Lifespan at Age 60 as a Function
of Maternal LifespanData are adjusted for
other predictor variables
Daughters, 6,517 cases
Sons, 5,419 cases
16Is the effect of non-linear inheritance observed
for non-biological relatives?
- We need to test an alternative hypothesis that
positive effects of long-lived parents on the
offspring survival may be non-biological and
caused by common environment and life style - What about lifespan of spouses?
17Persons Lifespan as a Function of Spouse
LifespanData are adjusted for other predictor
variables
Married Women, 4,530 cases
Married Men, 5,102 cases
18What about lifespan of other relatives?
(sisters vs sisters-in-law)
19Persons Lifespan as a Function of Sisters
LifespanData are adjusted for other predictor
variables
Females, 5,421 cases
Males, 7,378 cases
20Persons Lifespan as a Function of
Sisters-In-Law LifespanData are adjusted for
other predictor variables
Females, 4,789 cases
Males, 4,707 cases
21Are the effects of familial longevity in humans
similar to the effects of life-extending
mutations in laboratory animals?
22Mortality Kinetics Long-Lived Mutants of Mouse
and Drosophila
Mouse Snell dwarf mutant. Flurkey et al., PNAS,
2001.
Drosophila mutant methuselah. Lin et al.,
Science, 1998.
23Mortality Kinetics for Progeny Born to Long-Lived
(80) vs Short-Lived Parents Data are adjusted
for historical changes in lifespan
Sons
Daughters
24Conclusion
- In animal longevity mutants the mortality
kinetics demonstrates a parallel shift, which
suggests delayed damage accumulation compared to
control - In humans mortality kinetics demonstrates
mortality convergence, which suggests higher
initial reserve capacity of their organisms
(redundancy) with the same rate of damage
accumulation
25Parental-Age Effects (accumulation of mutation
load in parental germ cells)
- Does progeny conceived to older parents live
shorter lives?
26Paternal Age as a Risk Factor for Alzheimer
Disease
- MGAD - major gene for Alzheimer Disease
- Source L. Bertram et al. Neurogenetics, 1998, 1
277-280.
27Paternal Age and Risk of Schizophrenia
- Estimated cumulative incidence and percentage of
offspring estimated to have an onset of
schizophrenia by age 34 years, for categories of
paternal age. The numbers above the bars show the
proportion of offspring who were estimated to
have an onset of schizophrenia by 34 years of
age. - Source Malaspina et al., Arch Gen
Psychiatry.2001.
28Contour plot for daughters lifespan (deviation
from cohort mean) as a function of paternal
lifespan (X axis) and paternal age at daughters
birth (Y axis)
7984 cases 1800-1880 birth cohorts European
aristocratic families Distance weighted least
squares smooth
29Daughters Lifespan as a Function of
Paternal Age at Daughters Birth Data are
adjusted for other predictor variables
Daughters of shorter-lived fathers (lt80), 6727
cases
Daughters of longer-lived fathers (80), 1349
cases
30Conclusions
- Being conceived to old fathers is a risk factor,
but it is modulated by paternal longevity - It is OK to be conceived to old father if he
lives more than 80 years
31Is There Any Link Between Longevity and Fertility?
- What are the data and the predictions of the
evolutionary theory on this issue?
32Brief Historical Note
- Beeton, M., Yule, G.U., Pearson, K. 1900. Data
for the problem of evolution in man. V. On the
correlation between duration of life and the
number of offspring. Proc. R. Soc. London, 67
159-179. - Data used English Quaker records and Whitney
Family of Connectucut records for females and
American Whitney family and Burkes Landed
Gentry for males.
33Findings and Conclusions by Beeton et al., 1900
- They tested predictions of the Darwinian
evolutionary theory that the fittest individuals
should leave more offspring. - Findings Slightly positive relationship between
postreproductive lifespan (50) of both mothers
and fathers and the number of offspring. - Conclusion fertility is correlated with
longevity even after the fecund period is passed
and selective mortality reduces the numbers of
the offspring of the less fit relatively to the
fitter.
34Other Studies, Which Found Positive Correlation
Between Reproduction and Postreproductive
Longevity
- Alexander Graham Bell (1918) The longer lived
parents were the most fertile. - Bettie Freeman (1935) Weak positive correlations
between the duration of postreproductive life in
women and the number of offspring borne. Human
Biology, 7 392-418. - Bideau A. (1986) Duration of life in women after
age 45 was longer for those women who borne 12 or
more children. Population 41 59-72.
35Studies that Found no Relationship Between
Postreproductive Longevity and Reproduction
- Henry L. 1956. Travaux et Documents.
- Gauter, E. and Henry L. 1958. Travaux et
Documents, 26. - Knodel, J. 1988. Demographic Behavior in the
Past. - Le Bourg et al., 1993. Experimental Gerontology,
28 217-232.
36Study that Found a Trade-Off Between Reproductive
Success and Postreproductive Longevity
- Westendorp RGJ, Kirkwood TBL. 1998. Human
longevity at the cost of reproductive success.
Nature 396 743-746. - Extensive media coverage including BBC and over
70 citations in scientific literature as an
established scientific fact. Previous studies
were not quoted and discussed in this article.
37Number of progeny and age at first childbirth
dependent on the age at death of married
aristocratic women
- Source Westendorp, R. G. J., Kirkwood, T. B. L.
Human longevity at the cost of reproductive
success. Nature, 1998, 396, pp 743-746
38Do longevous women have impaired fertility ?Why
is this question so important and interesting
- Scientific Significance. This is a testable
prediction of some evolutionary theories of aging
(disposable soma theory of aging, Westendorp,
Kirkwood, 1998) - Practical Importance. Do we really wish to live
a long life at the cost of infertility? Based
these concerns a suggestion was made - "... increasing longevity through genetic
manipulation of the mechanisms of aging raises
deep biological and moral questions. These
questions should give us pause before we embark
on the enterprise of extending our lives - Walter Glennon "Extending the Human Life
Span", Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 2002,
Vol. 27, No. 3, pp. 339-354 - Educational Significance. Do we teach our
students right? Impaired fertility of longevous
women is often presented in scientific literature
and mass media as already established fact
(Kirkwood, 2002 Westendorp, 2002 Glennon,
2002 Perls et al., 2002 etc.) Is it a fact or
artifact ?
39Point estimates of progeny number for married
aristocratic women from different birth cohorts
as a function of age at death. The estimates of
progeny number are adjusted for trends over
calendar time using multiple regression.
- Source Westendorp, R. G. J., Kirkwood, T. B. L.
Human longevity at the cost of reproductive
success. Nature, 1998, 396, pp 743-746
40General Methodological Principle
- Before making strong conclusions, consider all
other possible explanations, including potential
flaws in data quality and analysis - Previous analysis by Westendorp and Kirkwood was
made on the assumption of data completenessNumbe
r of children born Number of children
recorded - Potential concerns data incompleteness,
under-reporting of short-lived children, women
(because of patrilineal structure of genealogical
records), persons who did not marry or did not
have children.Number of children born gtgt
Number of children recorded
41Test for Data Completeness
- Direct Test Cross-checking of the initial
dataset with other data sources - We examined 335 claims of childlessness in
the dataset used by Westendorp and Kirkwood.
When we cross-checked these claims with other
professional sources of data, we found that at
least 107 allegedly childless women (32) did
have children! - At least 32 of childlessness claims proved to
be wrong ("false negative claims") ! - Some illustrative examples
- Henrietta Kerr (16531741) was apparently
childless in the dataset used by Westendorp and
Kirkwood and lived 88 years. Our cross-checking
revealed that she did have at least one child,
Sir William Scott (2nd Baronet of Thirlstane,
died on October 8, 1725). - Charlotte Primrose (17761864) was also
considered childless in the initial dataset and
lived 88 years. Our cross-checking of the data
revealed that in fact she had as many as five
children Charlotte (18031886), Henry
(18061889), Charles (18071882), Arabella
(1809-1884), and William (18151881). - Wilhelmina Louise von Anhalt-Bernburg
(17991882), apparently childless, lived 83
years. In reality, however, she had at least
two children, Alexander (18201896) and Georg
(18261902).
42Antoinette de Bourbon(1493-1583)
- Lived almost 90 years
- She was claimed to have only one child in the
dataset used by Westendorp and Kirkwood Marie
(1515-1560), who became a mother of famous Queen
of Scotland, Mary Stuart. - Our data cross-checking revealed that in fact
Antoinette had 12 children! - Marie 1515-1560
- Francois Ier 1519-1563
- Louise 1521-1542
- Renee 1522-1602
- Charles 1524-1574
- Claude 1526-1573
- Louis 1527-1579
- Philippe 1529-1529
- Pierre 1529
- Antoinette 1531-1561
- Francois 1534-1563
- Rene 1536-1566
43Characteristics of Our Data Sample for
Reproduction-Longevity Studies
- 3,723 married women born in 1500-1875 and
belonging to the upper European nobility. - Women with two or more marriages (5) were
excluded from the analysis in order to facilitate
the interpretation of results (continuity of
exposure to childbearing).
- Every case of childlessness has been checked
using at least two different genealogical
sources.
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46Short Conclusion
- Exceptional human longevity is NOT associated
with infertility or childlessness
47More Detailed Conclusions
- We have found that previously reported high rate
of childlessness among long-lived women is an
artifact of data incompleteness, caused by
under-reporting of children. After data cleaning,
cross-checking and supplementation the
association between exceptional longevity and
childlessness has disappeared. - Thus, it is important now to revise a highly
publicized scientific concept of heavy
reproductive costs for human longevity. and to
make corrections in related teaching curriculums
for students. - It is also important to disavow the doubts and
concerns over further extension of human
lifespan, that were recently cast in biomedical
ethics because of gullible acceptance of the idea
of harmful side effects of lifespan extension,
including infertility (Glannon, 2002). - There is little doubt that the number of children
can affect human longevity through complications
of pregnancies and childbearing, as well as
through changes in socioeconomic status, etc.
However, the concept of heavy infertility cost
of human longevity is not supported by data, when
these data are carefully reanalyzed.
48Acknowledgments
- This study was made possible thanks to
- generous support from the National Institute on
Aging, and - stimulating working environment at the Center
on Aging, NORC/University of Chicago
49For More Information and Updates Please Visit Our
Scientific and Educational Website on Human
Longevity
- http//longevity-science.org