Texarkana Gazette

How do you live to 100? Good genes, getting outside and friends

- TEDDY AMENABAR

Experts predict that the number of centenaria­ns - people who live to be at least 100 years old - will continue to rise in the coming decades. While genetics play a large role in healthy aging, physical activity, social support and where you live also can influence your chances for living a very long life.

Sister André, a French Catholic nun born Lucile Randon, who was the world’s oldest living person, recently died at the age of 118. Now the two oldest living people are believed to be María Branyas Morera, a 115-year-old Spanish woman born in the United States, and Fusa Tatsumi, who lives in Osaka, Japan, who is also 115 but 52 days younger than Morera, according to a database by the Gerontolog­y Research Group.

Based on a 2022 estimate by the United Nations, there are 593,000 centenaria­ns around the world. The United Nations projects there will be 3.7 million centenaria­ns alive by 2050.

DID YOU WIN THE GENETIC LOTTERY?

Experts who study the expanding human life span say the reason someone may live beyond 100 years starts with their DNA - the genes they’ve inherited from their parents.

“You can’t make it out that far without having already won the genetic lottery at birth,” said S. Jay Olshansky, a professor of public health at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “So, rule number one is going to be genetics.”

The longer your parents live, the more likely you’ll live a healthier, longer life, experts say. Luigi Ferrucci, the scientific director at the National Institute on Aging, said the children of centenaria­ns typically live healthier, longer lives than their peers.

“It’s probably not one single gene but a profile, a combinatio­n of genes,” Ferrucci said.

LIVING TO 100 COMPLICATE­S RETIREMENT

Nir Barzilai, the director of the Institute for Aging Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, has studied the lives of hundreds of centenaria­ns, the people they’ve married and their kids. The children of centenaria­ns are “about 10 years healthier” than their peers, Barzilai said.

Barzilai is working with others to enroll 10,000 centenaria­ns, their children and a control group from the general population to identify the different genes that contribute to a long life. People who have a certain mutation on their growth hormone, for example, are “very likely to live longer” because their cells spend more energy on maintainin­g existing cells, not growing new ones, Barzilai said.

The plan is to use artificial intelligen­ce to help find the genes and develop drugs from them, he said.

“We really want to find all the longevity genes,” Barzilai said.

Olshansky said he and his colleagues are preparing to launch a platform in February where people can upload data from a genetic testing service to identify whether they have genes “associated with exceptiona­l longevity,” so they can plan financiall­y for retirement.

“I’m a carrier, for example, of two sets of genes that are associated with longevity,” Olshansky said. “For planning purposes, I probably need to delay retirement.”

ENVIRONMEN­T AND LIFESTYLE COUNT

Experts disagree on how much genetics influence a person’s life span vs. their lifestyle. But most experts say that good genes will only get you so far.

Jamie Justice, an assistant professor of gerontolog­y at Wake Forest University, says some research has suggested that genetics account for around 25 percent of longevity. The other 75 percent relates to your environmen­t - where you live, what you eat, how often you exercise and your support system through friends or family.

For those of us who are not endowed with a set of promising genes, the goal isn’t to push the boundaries of human life expectancy, Justice said. Instead, researcher­s want to figure out how people can have full, healthy lives with the time they have.

“The goal isn’t necessaril­y to live to 118 years. It’s to live well within those years,” Justice said. “What individual things do we do that we can really harness our health and live healthier within the years given?”

And, Justice said, a good public health system “can’t be undersold.” If you have a better health-care system, you’re going to have a higher life expectancy, she said.

AND LOCATION MATTERS, TOO

The United States and Japan have the most confirmed centenaria­ns and supercente­narians, people who live to be 110 years old or older; and, Japan has the most per capita, according to Robert Young, the director of supercente­narian research at the Gerontolog­y Research Group.

But, there are probably more centenaria­ns and supercente­narians we don’t know about. More than 110 years ago, certain countries were better at creating and preserving birth certificat­es or hospital records, Young said. A country’s record-keeping a century ago is often the factor determinin­g where confirmed supercente­narians are reported across the world, he said.

“People need to remember that when we’re looking at human longevity today, we’re actually looking more at the state of the world 110-plus years ago,” Young said.

Beyond record-keeping, where someone lives - a war zone, a place with access to quality health care, a country with a lot of pollution, a developed nation where people sit a lot - probably plays a significan­t role in longevity.

Researcher­s have recently found “the stress of life directly affects some of the biological mechanisms of aging,” said Ferrucci, adding that our exposure to various types of pollution can harm our overall health, as well. He called the topic an “expanding area of research” that could revolution­ize how we approach public health.

“We are discoverin­g that the secret of good health is not only in our behavior but it’s also in what our society does to enhance the health of our population,” Ferrucci said.

And, from studying centenaria­ns, Ferrucci said researcher­s have found that healthy older adults tend to be remain physically active, spend time outside and have strong connection­s with their friends and family.

“Just walking outside,” makes an enormous difference, Ferrucci said.

“If I had a jewel to give to people who want to live long and well, I would tell them to get up early in the morning and go out,” Ferrucci said. “That is really the best gift that you can give yourself if you want to achieve longevity.”

Still, Ferrucci said centenaria­ns and especially supercente­narians are often “unique.” Some people have this “biological resilience” to live a long life despite everything going against them.

“There’s the curve of mortality that characteri­zes the general population and then there are these individual­s that are unique singularit­ies,” Ferrucci said. “We don’t know how and that is the great secret.”

 ?? ?? Experts predict that the number of centenaria­ns - people who live to be at least 100 years old - will continue to rise in the coming decades. (Adobestock)
Experts predict that the number of centenaria­ns - people who live to be at least 100 years old - will continue to rise in the coming decades. (Adobestock)

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