Publication
Brief communication: Adrenal androgens and aging: Female chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) compared with women
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- Persistent URL
- Last modified
- 05/21/2025
- Type of Material
- Authors
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James K. Blevins, University of UtahJames E. Coxworth, University of UtahJames Herndon Jr., Emory UniversityKristen Hawkes, University of Utah
- Language
- English
- Date
- 2013-08-01
- Publisher
- Wiley: 12 months
- Publication Version
- Copyright Statement
- © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Final Published Version (URL)
- Title of Journal or Parent Work
- ISSN
- 0002-9483
- Volume
- 151
- Issue
- 4
- Start Page
- 643
- End Page
- 648
- Grant/Funding Information
- Grant sponsor: NIH; Grant numbers: P01AG026423 and P51RR000165.
- Grant sponsor: NSF; Grant number: BCS—0717886.
- Supplemental Material (URL)
- Abstract
- Ovarian cycling continues to similar ages in women and chimpanzees yet our nearest living cousins become decrepit during their fertile years and rarely outlive them. Given the importance of estrogen in maintaining physiological systems aside from fertility, similar ovarian aging in humans and chimpanzees combined with somatic aging differences indicates an important role for nonovarian estrogen. Consistent with this framework, researchers have nominated the adrenal androgen dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and its sulfate (DHEAS), which can be peripherally converted to estrogen, as a biomarker of aging in humans and other primates. Faster decline in production of this steroid with age in chimpanzees could help explain somatic aging differences. Here, we report circulating levels of DHEAS in captive female chimpanzees and compare them with published levels in women. Instead of faster, the decline is slower in chimpanzees, but from a much lower peak. Levels reported for other great apes are lower still. These results point away from slowed decline but toward increased DHEAS production as one of the mechanisms underlying the evolution of human longevity.
- Author Notes
- Keywords
- Research Categories
- Anthropology, Medical and Forensic
- Biology, Zoology
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