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Epigenetic Clocks in Neurodegeneration — Causal Drivers or Passive Markers

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experiment1363 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Epigenetic Clocks in Neurodegeneration

Rationale

Epigenetic clocks represent a molecular biomarker of biological aging based on DNA methylation patterns at specific CpG sites. The most widely studied epigenetic clock, the Horvath pan-tissue clock, uses 353 CpG sites to predict chronological age with remarkable accuracy across multiple tissue types [@horvath2013]. Subsequent studies have developed tissue-specific clocks and "grimage" or "PhenoAge" clocks that better capture biological age and health outcomes [@lu2019].

A critical question in neurodegeneration research is whether epigenetic age acceleration (the difference between epigenetic age and chronological age) represents:

  • A passive marker of underlying biological processes driving neurodegeneration
  • An active driver that contributes to disease pathogenesis
  • Both — a bidirectional relationship where neurodegeneration accelerates epigenetic aging and vice versa
  • This experiment seeks to distinguish between these possibilities through integrated multi-omics approaches, functional perturbation, and longitudinal patient studies.

    Biological Background

    Epigenetic Clock Mechanisms

    DNA methylation patterns accumulate with age due to:

    • Stochastic drift: Random methylation changes over time
    • Developmental reprogramming: Failure to maintain epigenetic programs
    • Environmental exposures: Cumulative epigenetic modifications from lifestyle factors
    • Cellular senescence: Senescence-associated DNA methylation changes

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    experiments-epigenetic-clocks-neurodegeneration
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