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Journal ArticleDOI

The heritability of human longevity: A population-based study of 2872 Danish twin pairs born 1870–1900

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TLDR
The nature of genetic influences on longevity is probably non-additive and environmental influences non-shared, and there is no evidence for an impact of shared (family) environment.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to explore, in a large and non-censored twin cohort, the nature (i.e., additive versus non-additive) and magnitude (i.e., heritability) of genetic influences on inter-individual differences in hu- man longevity. The sample comprised all identified and traced non-emigrant like-sex twin pairs born in Denmark during the period 1870-1900 with a zygosity diagnosis and both members of the pairs surviving the age of 15 years. A total of 2872 pairs were included. Age at death was obtained from the Danish Central Person Register, the Danish Cause-of-Death Register and various other registers. The sample was almost non-censored on the date of the last follow-up (May 1, 1994), all but 0.6% had died, leaving a total of 2872 pairs for analysis. Proportions of variance attributable to genetic and environmental factors were assessed from variance-covariance matrices using the structural equation model approach. The most parsi- monious explanation of the data was provided by a model that included genetic dominance (non-additive genetic ef- fects caused by interaction within gene loci) and non-shared environmental factors (environmental factors that are in- dividual-specific and not shared in a family). The heri- tability of longevity was estimated to be 0.26 for males and 0.23 for females. The small sex-difference was caused by a greater impact of non-shared environmental factors in the females. Heritability was found to be constant over the three 10-year birth cohorts included. Thus, longevity seems to be only moderately heritable. The nature of ge- netic influences on longevity is probably non-additive and environmental influences non-shared. There is no evi- dence for an impact of shared (family) environment.

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Relationship of Leisure-Time Physical Activity and Mortality: The Finnish Twin Cohort

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Association of FOXO3A variation with human longevity confirmed in German centenarians

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection

R. C. Punnett
- 01 Oct 1930 - 
TL;DR: Although it is true that most text-books of genetics open with a chapter on biometry, closer inspection will reveal that this has little connexion with the body of the work, and that more often than not it is merely belated homage to a once fashionable study.
Book

Methodology for Genetic Studies of Twins and Families

TL;DR: The LISREL Script for Rater Bias Model and Data for Simplex Model as mentioned in this paper is one of the most well-known models in the literature for gene expression analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic associations with human longevity at the APOE and ACE loci.

TL;DR: Results on two genes, chosen for their impact on cardiovascular risk, encoding apolipoprotein E (ApoE), angiotensin–converting enzyme (ACE) are reported, finding that the ε4 allele of APOE, which promotes premature atherosclerosis, is significantly less frequent in centenarians than in controls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic and environmental influences on premature death in adult adoptees

TL;DR: It is concluded that premature death in adults has a strong genetic background--especially death due to infections and vascular causes.
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