HALL: a comprehensive database for human aging and longevity studies

Hao Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Song Wu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jiaming Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhuang Xiong(Fuzhou University), Kuan Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Weidong Ye(Wenzhou Medical University), Jie Ren(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qiaoran Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Muzhao Xiong(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zikai Zheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shuo Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zichu Han(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yang Peng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Beier Jiang(Wenzhou Medical University), Jiale Ping(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuesheng Zuo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaoyong Lu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qiaocheng Zhai(Wenzhou Medical University), Haoteng Yan(Capital Medical University), Si Wang(Capital Medical University), Shuai Ma(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bing Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jinlin Ye(Wenzhou Medical University), Jing Qu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yun‐Gui Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Feng Zhang(Wenzhou Medical University), Guang‐Hui Liu(Capital Medical University), Yīmíng Bào(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Weiqi Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 23, 2023
Cited by 16Open Access
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Abstract

Diverse individuals age at different rates and display variable susceptibilities to tissue aging, functional decline and aging-related diseases. Centenarians, exemplifying extreme longevity, serve as models for healthy aging. The field of human aging and longevity research is rapidly advancing, garnering significant attention and accumulating substantial data in recent years. Omics technologies, encompassing phenomics, genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics and microbiomics, have provided multidimensional insights and revolutionized cohort-based investigations into human aging and longevity. Accumulated data, covering diverse cells, tissues and cohorts across the lifespan necessitates the establishment of an open and integrated database. Addressing this, we established the Human Aging and Longevity Landscape (HALL), a comprehensive multi-omics repository encompassing a diverse spectrum of human cohorts, spanning from young adults to centenarians. The core objective of HALL is to foster healthy aging by offering an extensive repository of information on biomarkers that gauge the trajectory of human aging. Moreover, the database facilitates the development of diagnostic tools for aging-related conditions and empowers targeted interventions to enhance longevity. HALL is publicly available at https://ngdc.cncb.ac.cn/hall/index.


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