Steve Horvath
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Steve Horvath is a German–American aging researcher, geneticist, and biostatistician. As the familyname Horváth indicates, he is of hungarian ancestry. He is a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles known for developing the Epigenetic clock, Horvath aging clock, which is a highly accurate molecular Biomarkers of aging, biomarker of aging, and for developing weighted correlation network analysis. The recipient of several research awards he has studied Biomarkers of aging, genomic biomarkers of aging, the senescence, aging process, and many age related diseases/conditions. Horvath is a scientist at the anti-aging startup Altos Labs.


Background

Horvath was born in Frankfurt, Germany and received his Bachelor of Science in Mathematics and Physics at the Technical University of Berlin, graduating in 1989. He received his Doctor of Philosophy, Ph.D. in mathematics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, UNC Chapel Hill in 1995 and his Doctor of Science, Sc.D. in biostatistics at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard in 2000. In 2000, Horvath joined the faculty of the University of California, University of California, Los Angeles, where he is a professor of human genetics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and of biostatistics at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.


Work on the epigenetic clock

Horvath's development of the DNA methylation based age estimation method known as epigenetic clock was featured in Nature (journal), Nature magazine. In 2011, Horvath co-authored the first article that described an age estimation method based on DNA methylation levels from saliva. In 2013 Horvath published a single author article on a multi-tissue age estimation method that applies to all nucleated cells, tissues, and organs. This discovery, known as the Horvath clock, was unexpected because cell types differ in terms of their DNA methylation patterns and age related DNA methylation changes tend to be tissue specific. In his article, he demonstrated that estimated age, also referred to as DNA methylation age, has the following properties: it is close to zero for embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cells, it correlates with cell Subculture (biology)#Passage number, passage number; it gives rise to a highly heritable measure of age acceleration; and it is applicable to chimpanzees. Since the Horvath clock allows one to contrast the ages of different tissues from the same individuals, it can be used to identify tissues that show evidence of increased or decreased age.


Age related conditions and phenotypes

Horvath co-authored the first articles demonstrating that DNA methylation age predicts life-expectancy and is positively associated with obesity, HIV infection, Alzheimer's disease, cognitive decline, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, early menopause, and Werner syndrome.


Genetics of aging

Horvath published the first article demonstrating that trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) is associated with strong epigenetic age acceleration effects in both blood and brain tissue. Using Genome-wide association study, genome-wide association studies, Horvath's team identified the first genetic markers (SNPs) that exhibit genome-wide significant associations with epigenetic aging rates – in particular, the first genome-wide significant genetic loci associated with epigenetic aging rates in blood notably the telomerase reverse transcriptase gene (Telomerase reverse transcriptase, TERT) locus. As part of this work, his team uncovered a paradoxical relationship: genetic variants associated with longer leukocyte telomere length in the TERT gene paradoxically confer higher epigenetic age acceleration in blood.


Work in biodemography

Horvath proposed that slower epigenetic aging rates could explain the mortality advantage of women and the Hispanic paradox, Hispanic mortality paradox.


Lifestyle factors and nutrition

Horvath published the first large scale study of the effect of lifestyle factors on epigenetic aging rates. These cross sectional of epigenetic aging rates in blood confirm the conventional wisdom regarding the benefits of education, eating a high plant diet with lean meats, moderate alcohol consumption, physical activity and the risks associated with Metabolic syndromemetablic syndrome, metabolic syndrome.


Epigenetic clock theory of aging

Horvath and Raj proposed an epigenetic clock theory of aging which views biological aging as an unintended consequence of both developmental programs and maintenance program, the molecular footprints of which give rise to DNA methylation age estimators. DNAm age is viewed as a proximal readout of a collection of innate ageing processes that conspire with other, independent root causes of aging, to the detriment of tissue function.


Weighted correlation network analysis

Horvath and members of his lab developed a widely used Systems biology, systems biological data mining technique known as weighted correlation network analysis. He published a book on weighted network analysis and genomic applications.


Awards and honors

Horvath has won several awards for his work on the epigenetic clock. * 2017 Allen Distinguished Investigator award for clock studies in vertebrates * 2019 Open Philanthropy Project award for mechanistic studies of the epigenetic clock * 2019 Schober Award for outstanding and innovative research in the field of ageing * 2022 Nathan W. Shock Award * 2022 Fellow of the American Statistical Association


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Horvath, Steve 1967 births American people of Hungarian descent German people of Hungarian descent Educators from California David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA faculty Biogerontologists Harvard School of Public Health alumni Living people University of North Carolina alumni Fellows of the American Statistical Association