Abstract

Long-term exposure to air pollution is associated with age-related diseases. We explored the association between accelerated biological aging and air pollution, a potential mechanism linking air pollution and health. We estimated long-term exposure to PM10, PM2.5, PM2.5 absorbance/black carbon (BC), and NOx via land-use regression models in individuals from the KORA F4 cohort. Accelerated biological aging was assessed using telomere length (TeloAA) and three epigenetic measures: DNA methylation age acceleration (DNAmAA), extrinsic epigenetic age acceleration (correlated with immune cell counts, EEAA), and intrinsic epigenetic age acceleration (independent of immune cell counts, IEAA). We also investigated sex-specific associations between air pollution and biological aging, given the published association between sex and aging measures. In KORA an interquartile range (0.97 μg/m3) increase in PM2.5 was associated with a 0.33 y increase in EEAA (CI = 0.01, 0.64; P = 0.04). BC and NOx (indicators or traffic exposure) were associated with DNAmAA and IEAA in women, while TeloAA was inversely associated with BC in men. We replicated this inverse BC-TeloAA association in the Normative Aging Study, a male cohort based in the USA. A multiple phenotype analysis in KORA F4 combining all aging measures showed that BC and PM10 were broadly associated with biological aging in men. Thus, we conclude that long-term exposure to air pollution is associated with biological aging measures, potentially in a sex-specific manner. However, many of the associations were relatively weak and further replication of overall and sex-specific associations is warranted.

Highlights

  • Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution is linked to a host of adverse age-related outcomes

  • All biological age acceleration measures and air pollution exposures were independent of chronological age (Figures 1 and 2)

  • We note that telomere length is only weakly correlated with epigenetic aging measures indicating possible www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget

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Summary

Introduction

Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution is linked to a host of adverse age-related outcomes. Telomere length is one of the most widely used and validated measures of biological aging [29, 30], and long-term air pollution exposure has been associated with shortened telomeres, indicating an accelerated aging process [31,32,33], a recent study has failed to replicate these associations [34]. Summary measures representing epigenetic states have emerged as an accurate assessment of age and biological aging. In particular the epigenetic age measure created by Horvath et al has been shown to be accurate across a wide range of tissues [35] and is associated with mortality [37] and metabolic outcomes [38]

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