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Aging clocks

ProAge (proteomic age clock)

DEProAge (proteomische Altersuhr)

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ProAge and related proteomic-age clocks estimate biological age from the concentrations of hundreds to thousands of plasma or serum proteins measured by aptamer-based (SomaScan) or proximity-extension assay (Olink) platforms. Landmark studies by Lehallier and colleagues (2019, Nature Medicine) demonstrated that the plasma proteome changes non-linearly with age in three distinct waves, and subsequent work trained predictive models on up to ~3,000 proteins. Proteomic clocks capture post-transcriptional and secreted signals not reflected in DNA methylation, and recent analyses suggest protein-based age acceleration associates with age-related disease risk, though platform-specific protein selection means scores are not directly interchangeable across studies.

Sources

  1. Lehallier B, Gate D, Schaum N, Bhatt DL, Bhatt P, Wyss-Coray T. (2019). Undulating changes in human plasma proteome profiles across the lifespan. *Nature Medicine*doi:10.1038/s41591-019-0673-2