Graf Gloria Huei-Jong, Zhang Yalu, Domingue Benjamin W, Harris Kathleen Mullan, Kothari Meeraj, Kwon Dayoon, Muennig Peter, Belsky Daniel W
Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Columbia School of Social Work, New York, NY 10027, USA.
PNAS Nexus. 2022 Mar 29;1(2):pgac029. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac029. eCollection 2022 May.
Lower socioeconomic status is associated with faster biological aging, the gradual and progressive decline in system integrity that accumulates with advancing age. Efforts to promote upward social mobility may, therefore, extend healthy lifespan. However, recent studies suggest that upward mobility may also have biological costs related to the stresses of crossing social boundaries. We tested associations of life-course social mobility with biological aging using data from participants in the 2016 Health and Retirement Study (HRS) Venous Blood Study who provided blood-chemistry ( = 9,255) and/or DNA methylation (DNAm) data ( = 3,976). We quantified social mobility from childhood to later-life using data on childhood family characteristics, educational attainment, and wealth accumulation. We quantified biological aging using 3 DNAm "clocks" and 3 blood-chemistry algorithms. We observed substantial social mobility among study participants. Those who achieved upward mobility exhibited less-advanced and slower biological aging. Associations of upward mobility with less-advanced and slower aging were consistent for blood-chemistry and DNAm measures of biological aging, and were similar for men and women and for Black and White Americans (Pearson-r effect-sizes ∼0.2 for blood-chemistry measures and the DNAm GrimAge clock and DunedinPoAm pace-of-aging measures; effect-sizes were smaller for the DNAm PhenoAge clock). Analysis restricted to educational mobility suggested differential effects by racial identity; mediating links between educational mobility and healthy aging may be disrupted by structural racism. In contrast, mobility producing accumulation of wealth appeared to benefit White and Black Americans equally, suggesting economic intervention to reduce wealth inequality may have potential to heal disparities in healthy aging.
社会经济地位较低与生物衰老加速有关,生物衰老是指随着年龄增长系统完整性逐渐且持续下降的过程。因此,促进社会向上流动的努力可能会延长健康寿命。然而,最近的研究表明,向上流动也可能因跨越社会界限带来的压力而产生生物学成本。我们使用2016年健康与退休研究(HRS)静脉血研究参与者的数据,测试了生命历程中的社会流动与生物衰老之间的关联,这些参与者提供了血液化学数据(n = 9255)和/或DNA甲基化(DNAm)数据(n = 3976)。我们利用童年家庭特征、教育程度和财富积累数据,对从童年到晚年的社会流动进行了量化。我们使用3种DNAm“时钟”和3种血液化学算法对生物衰老进行了量化。我们观察到研究参与者之间存在显著的社会流动。实现向上流动的人表现出生物衰老程度较低且速度较慢。向上流动与较低程度和较慢速度的衰老之间的关联,在血液化学和DNAm生物衰老测量中是一致的,并且在男性和女性以及美国黑人和白人中相似(血液化学测量、DNAm GrimAge时钟和达尼丁衰老速度测量的Pearson-r效应大小约为0.2;DNAm PhenoAge时钟的效应大小较小)。仅限于教育流动的分析表明,种族身份存在差异影响;教育流动与健康衰老之间的中介联系可能会因结构性种族主义而中断。相比之下,带来财富积累的流动似乎对美国白人和黑人同样有益,这表明减少财富不平等的经济干预可能有潜力消除健康衰老方面的差异。