Svetlana Ukraintseva
Overview:
Dr. Ukraintseva studies causes of human aging and related decline in resilience, to identify genetic and other factors responsible for the increase in mortality risk with age eventually limiting longevity. She explores complex relationships, including trade-offs, between physiological aging-changes and risks of major diseases (with emphasis on Alzheimer’s and cancer), as well as survival, to find new genetic and other targets for anti-aging interventions and disease prevention. She also investigates possibilities of repurposing of existing vaccines and treatments for AD prevention and interventions into the aging. For this, Dr. Ukraintseva and her team use data from several large human studies containing rich genetic and phenotypic information (including longitudinal measurements) on thousands of individuals. Dr. Ukraintseva is a PI and Key Investigator on several NIH funded grants, and has more than 130 peer-reviewed publications, including in major journals such as Nature Reviews, Stroke, European Journal of Human Genetics, and some other.
Positions:
Associate Research Professor in the Social Science Research Institute
Social Science Research Institute
Institutes and Provost's Academic Units
Member of the Duke Cancer Institute
Duke Cancer Institute
School of Medicine
Education:
Ph.D. 1998
Russian Academy of Medical Science (Russia)
Grants:
Racial and Geographic Disparities in Risk and Survival of Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias: Effects of Over/UnderDiagnosis and Disease Severity
Administered By
Institutes and Provost's Academic Units
Awarded By
National Institutes of Health
Role
Senior Investigator
Start Date
End Date
Racial and Geographic Disparities in Risk and Survival of Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias: Effects of Over/UnderDiagnosis and Disease Severity
Administered By
Institutes and Provost's Academic Units
Awarded By
National Institutes of Health
Role
Senior Investigator
Start Date
End Date
Publications:
Roles of interacting stress-related genes in lifespan regulation: insights for translating experimental findings to humans.
<h4>Aim</h4>Experimental studies provided numerous evidence that caloric/dietary restriction may improve health and increase the lifespan of laboratory animals, and that the interplay among molecules that sense cellular stress signals and those regulating cell survival can play a crucial role in cell response to nutritional stressors. However, it is unclear whether the interplay among corresponding genes also plays a role in human health and lifespan.<h4>Methods</h4>Literature about roles of cellular stressors have been reviewed, such as amino acid deprivation, and the integrated stress response (ISR) pathway in health and aging. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in two candidate genes (<i>GCN2/EIF2AK4</i> and <i>CHOP/DDIT3</i>) that are closely involved in the cellular stress response to amino acid starvation, have been selected using information from experimental studies. Associations of these SNPs and their interactions with human survival in the Health and Retirement Study data have been estimated. The impact of collective associations of multiple interacting SNP pairs on survival has been evaluated, using a recently developed composite index: the <i>SNP-specific Interaction Polygenic Risk Score</i> (SIPRS).<h4>Results</h4>Significant interactions have been found between SNPs from <i>GCN2/EIF2AK4</i> and <i>CHOP/DDI3T</i> genes that were associated with survival 85+ compared to survival between ages 75 and 85 in the total sample (males and females combined) and in females only. This may reflect sex differences in genetic regulation of the human lifespan. Highly statistically significant associations of SIPRS [constructed for the rs16970024 (GCN2/EIF2AK4) and rs697221 (CHOP/DDIT3)] with survival in both sexes also been found in this study.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Identifying associations of the genetic interactions with human survival is an important step in translating the knowledge from experimental to human aging research. Significant associations of multiple SNPxSNP interactions in ISR genes with survival to the oldest old age that have been found in this study, can help uncover mechanisms of multifactorial regulation of human lifespan and its heterogeneity.
Authors
Yashin, AI; Wu, D; Arbeev, K; Yashkin, AP; Akushevich, I; Bagley, O; Duan, M; Ukraintseva, S
MLA Citation
Yashin, Anatoliy I., et al. “Roles of interacting stress-related genes in lifespan regulation: insights for translating experimental findings to humans.” Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics, vol. 5, no. 4, Jan. 2021, pp. 357–79.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1502465
PMID
34825130
Source
epmc
Published In
Journal of Translational Genetics and Genomics
Volume
5
Published Date
Start Page
357
End Page
379
Rare genetic variants correlate with better processing speed.
We conducted a genome-wide association study of Digit Symbol Substitution Test scores administered in 4207 family members of the Long Life Family Study (LLFS). Genotype data were imputed to the HRC panel of 64,940 haplotypes resulting in ∼15M genetic variants with a quality score > 0.7. The results were replicated using genetic data imputed to the 1000 Genomes phase 3 reference panel from 2 Danish twin cohorts: the study of Middle Aged Danish Twins and the Longitudinal Study of Aging Danish Twins. The genome-wide association study in LLFS discovered 18 rare genetic variants (minor allele frequency (MAF) < 1.0%) that reached genome-wide significance (p-value < 5 × 10<sup>-8</sup>). Among these, 17 rare variants in chromosome 3 had large protective effects on the processing speed, including rs7623455, rs9821776, rs9821587, rs78704059, which were replicated in the combined Danish twin cohort. These SNPs are located in/near 2 genes, THRB and RARB, that belonged to the thyroid hormone receptors family that may influence the speed of metabolism and cognitive aging. The gene-level tests in LLFS confirmed that these 2 genes are associated with processing speed.
Authors
Song, Z; Gurinovich, A; Nygaard, M; Mengel-From, J; Andersen, S; Cosentino, S; Schupf, N; Lee, J; Zmuda, J; Ukraintseva, S; Arbeev, K; Christensen, K; Perls, T; Sebastiani, P
MLA Citation
Song, Zeyuan, et al. “Rare genetic variants correlate with better processing speed.” Neurobiology of Aging, vol. 125, May 2023, pp. 115–22. Epmc, doi:10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2022.11.018.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1566676
PMID
36813607
Source
epmc
Published In
Neurobiology of Aging
Volume
125
Published Date
Start Page
115
End Page
122
DOI
10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2022.11.018
Understanding Alzheimer's disease in the context of aging: Findings from applications of stochastic process models to the Health and Retirement Study.
There is growing literature on applications of biodemographic models, including stochastic process models (SPM), to studying regularities of age dynamics of biological variables in relation to aging and disease development. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is especially good candidate for SPM applications because age is a major risk factor for this heterogeneous complex trait. However, such applications are largely lacking. This paper starts filling this gap and applies SPM to data on onset of AD and longitudinal trajectories of body mass index (BMI) constructed from the Health and Retirement Study surveys and Medicare-linked data. We found that APOE e4 carriers are less robust to deviations of trajectories of BMI from the optimal levels compared to non-carriers. We also observed age-related decline in adaptive response (resilience) related to deviations of BMI from optimal levels as well as APOE- and age-dependence in other components related to variability of BMI around the mean allostatic values and accumulation of allostatic load. SPM applications thus allow revealing novel connections between age, genetic factors and longitudinal trajectories of risk factors in the context of AD and aging creating new opportunities for understanding AD development, forecasting trends in AD incidence and prevalence in populations, and studying disparities in those.
Authors
Arbeev, KG; Bagley, O; Yashkin, AP; Duan, H; Akushevich, I; Ukraintseva, SV; Yashin, AI
MLA Citation
Arbeev, Konstantin G., et al. “Understanding Alzheimer's disease in the context of aging: Findings from applications of stochastic process models to the Health and Retirement Study.” Mechanisms of Ageing and Development, vol. 211, Apr. 2023, p. 111791. Epmc, doi:10.1016/j.mad.2023.111791.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1567070
PMID
36796730
Source
epmc
Published In
Mechanisms of Ageing and Development
Volume
211
Published Date
Start Page
111791
DOI
10.1016/j.mad.2023.111791
A metabolomic signature of the APOE2 allele.
With the goal of identifying metabolites that significantly correlate with the protective e2 allele of the apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene, we established a consortium of five studies of healthy aging and extreme human longevity with 3545 participants. This consortium includes the New England Centenarian Study, the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, the Arivale study, the Longevity Genes Project/LonGenity studies, and the Long Life Family Study. We analyzed the association between APOE genotype groups E2 (e2e2 and e2e3 genotypes, N = 544), E3 (e3e3 genotypes, N = 2299), and E4 (e3e4 and e4e4 genotypes, N = 702) with metabolite profiles in the five studies and used fixed effect meta-analysis to aggregate the results. Our meta-analysis identified a signature of 19 metabolites that are significantly associated with the E2 genotype group at FDR < 10%. The group includes 10 glycerolipids and 4 glycerophospholipids that were all higher in E2 carriers compared to E3, with fold change ranging from 1.08 to 1.25. The organic acid 6-hydroxyindole sulfate, previously linked to changes in gut microbiome that were reflective of healthy aging and longevity, was also higher in E2 carriers compared to E3 carriers. Three sterol lipids and one sphingolipid species were significantly lower in carriers of the E2 genotype group. For some of these metabolites, the effect of the E2 genotype opposed the age effect. No metabolites reached a statistically significant association with the E4 group. This work confirms and expands previous results connecting the APOE gene to lipid regulation and suggests new links between the e2 allele, lipid metabolism, aging, and the gut-brain axis.
Authors
Sebastiani, P; Song, Z; Ellis, D; Tian, Q; Schwaiger-Haber, M; Stancliffe, E; Lustgarten, MS; Funk, CC; Baloni, P; Yao, C-H; Joshi, S; Marron, MM; Gurinovich, A; Li, M; Leshchyk, A; Xiang, Q; Andersen, SL; Feitosa, MF; Ukraintseva, S; Soerensen, M; Fiehn, O; Ordovas, JM; Haigis, M; Monti, S; Barzilai, N; Milman, S; Ferrucci, L; Rappaport, N; Patti, GJ; Perls, TT
MLA Citation
Sebastiani, Paola, et al. “A metabolomic signature of the APOE2 allele.” Geroscience, vol. 45, no. 1, Feb. 2023, pp. 415–26. Epmc, doi:10.1007/s11357-022-00646-9.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1533564
PMID
35997888
Source
epmc
Published In
Geroscience
Volume
45
Published Date
Start Page
415
End Page
426
DOI
10.1007/s11357-022-00646-9
APOE ɛ4 allele and TOMM40-APOC1 variants jointly contribute to survival to older ages.
Age-related diseases characteristic of post-reproductive life, aging, and life span are the examples of polygenic non-Mendelian traits with intricate genetic architectures. Polygenicity of these traits implies that multiple variants can impact their risks independently or jointly as combinations of specific variants. Here, we examined chances to live to older ages, 85 years and older, for carriers of compound genotypes comprised of combinations of genotypes of rs429358 (APOE ɛ4 encoding polymorphism), rs2075650 (TOMM40), and rs12721046 (APOC1) polymorphisms using data from four human studies. The choice of these polymorphisms was motivated by our prior results showing that the ɛ4 carriers having minor alleles of the other two polymorphisms were at exceptionally high risk of Alzheimer's disease (AD), compared with non-carriers of the minor alleles. Consistent with our prior findings for AD, we show here that the adverse effect of the ɛ4 allele on survival to older ages is significantly higher in carriers of minor alleles of rs2075650 and/or rs12721046 polymorphisms compared with their non-carriers. The exclusion of AD cases made this effect stronger. Our results provide compelling evidence that AD does not mediate the associations of the same compound genotypes with chances to survive until older ages, indicating the existence of genetically heterogeneous mechanisms. The survival chances can be mainly associated with lipid- and immunity-related mechanisms, whereas the AD risk, can be driven by the AD-biomarker-related mechanism, among others. Targeting heterogeneous polygenic profiles of individuals at high risks of complex traits is promising for the translation of genetic discoveries to health care.
Authors
Kulminski, AM; Jain-Washburn, E; Philipp, I; He, L; Loika, Y; Loiko, E; Bagley, O; Ukraintseva, S; Yashin, A; Arbeev, K; Stallard, E; Feitosa, MF; Schupf, N; Christensen, K; Culminskaya, I
MLA Citation
Kulminski, Alexander M., et al. “APOE ɛ4 allele and TOMM40-APOC1 variants jointly contribute to survival to older ages.” Aging Cell, vol. 21, no. 12, Dec. 2022, p. e13730. Epmc, doi:10.1111/acel.13730.
URI
https://scholars.duke.edu/individual/pub1555833
PMID
36330582
Source
epmc
Published In
Aging Cell
Volume
21
Published Date
Start Page
e13730
DOI
10.1111/acel.13730

Associate Research Professor in the Social Science Research Institute
Contact:
2024 W. Main St, Erwin Mill Bldg, A105, Durham, NC 27708-0420
Box 90420, Durham, NC 27708-0420