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Dive into the research topics where Janie Corley is active.

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Featured researches published by Janie Corley.


BMC Geriatrics | 2007

The Lothian Birth Cohort 1936: a study to examine influences on cognitive ageing from age 11 to age 70 and beyond.

Ian J. Deary; Alan J. Gow; Michelle D. Taylor; Janie Corley; Caroline E. Brett; Valerie Wilson; Harry Campbell; Lawrence J. Whalley; Peter M. Visscher; David J. Porteous

BackgroundCognitive ageing is a major burden for society and a major influence in lowering peoples independence and quality of life. It is the most feared aspect of ageing. There are large individual differences in age-related cognitive changes. Seeking the determinants of cognitive ageing is a research priority. A limitation of many studies is the lack of a sufficiently long period between cognitive assessments to examine determinants. Here, the aim is to examine influences on cognitive ageing between childhood and old age.Methods/DesignThe study is designed as a follow-up cohort study. The participants comprise surviving members of the Scottish Mental Survey of 1947 (SMS1947; N = 70,805) who reside in the Edinburgh area (Lothian) of Scotland. The SMS1947 applied a valid test of general intelligence to all children born in 1936 and attending Scottish schools in June 1947. A total of 1091 participants make up the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936. They undertook: a medical interview and examination; physical fitness testing; extensive cognitive testing (reasoning, memory, speed of information processing, and executive function); personality, quality of life and other psycho-social questionnaires; and a food frequency questionnaire. They have taken the same mental ability test (the Moray House Test No. 12) at age 11 and age 70. They provided blood samples for DNA extraction and testing and other biomarker analyses. Here we describe the background and aims of the study, the recruitment procedures and details of numbers tested, and the details of all examinations.DiscussionThe principal strength of this cohort is the rarely captured phenotype of lifetime cognitive change. There is additional rich information to examine the determinants of individual differences in this lifetime cognitive change. This protocol report is important in alerting other researchers to the data available in the cohort.


Genome Biology | 2015

DNA methylation age of blood predicts all-cause mortality in later life

Riccardo E. Marioni; Sonia Shah; Allan F. McRae; Brian H. Chen; Elena Colicino; Sarah E. Harris; Jude Gibson; Anjali K. Henders; Paul Redmond; Simon R. Cox; Alison Pattie; Janie Corley; Lee Murphy; Nicholas G. Martin; Grant W. Montgomery; Andrew P. Feinberg; M. Daniele Fallin; Michael L Multhaup; Andrew E. Jaffe; Roby Joehanes; Joel Schwartz; Allan C. Just; Kathryn L. Lunetta; Joanne M. Murabito; Steve Horvath; Andrea Baccarelli; Daniel Levy; Peter M. Visscher; Naomi R. Wray; Ian J. Deary

BackgroundDNA methylation levels change with age. Recent studies have identified biomarkers of chronological age based on DNA methylation levels. It is not yet known whether DNA methylation age captures aspects of biological age.ResultsHere we test whether differences between people’s chronological ages and estimated ages, DNA methylation age, predict all-cause mortality in later life. The difference between DNA methylation age and chronological age (Δage) was calculated in four longitudinal cohorts of older people. Meta-analysis of proportional hazards models from the four cohorts was used to determine the association between Δage and mortality. A 5-year higher Δage is associated with a 21% higher mortality risk, adjusting for age and sex. After further adjustments for childhood IQ, education, social class, hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and APOE e4 status, there is a 16% increased mortality risk for those with a 5-year higher Δage. A pedigree-based heritability analysis of Δage was conducted in a separate cohort. The heritability of Δage was 0.43.ConclusionsDNA methylation-derived measures of accelerated aging are heritable traits that predict mortality independently of health status, lifestyle factors, and known genetic factors.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Childhood Socioeconomic Position and Objectively Measured Physical Capability Levels in Adulthood: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Kate Birnie; Rachel Cooper; Richard M. Martin; Diana Kuh; Avan Aihie Sayer; Beatriz Alvarado; Antony James Bayer; Kaare Christensen; Sung-Il Cho; C Cooper; Janie Corley; Leone Craig; Ian J. Deary; Panayotes Demakakos; Shah Ebrahim; John Gallacher; Alan J. Gow; David Gunnell; Steven A. Haas; Tomas Hemmingsson; Hazel Inskip; Soong-Nang Jang; Kenya Noronha; Merete Osler; Alberto Palloni; Finn Rasmussen; Brigitte Santos-Eggimann; Jacques Spagnoli; Andrew Steptoe; Holly E. Syddall

Background Grip strength, walking speed, chair rising and standing balance time are objective measures of physical capability that characterise current health and predict survival in older populations. Socioeconomic position (SEP) in childhood may influence the peak level of physical capability achieved in early adulthood, thereby affecting levels in later adulthood. We have undertaken a systematic review with meta-analyses to test the hypothesis that adverse childhood SEP is associated with lower levels of objectively measured physical capability in adulthood. Methods and Findings Relevant studies published by May 2010 were identified through literature searches using EMBASE and MEDLINE. Unpublished results were obtained from study investigators. Results were provided by all study investigators in a standard format and pooled using random-effects meta-analyses. 19 studies were included in the review. Total sample sizes in meta-analyses ranged from N = 17,215 for chair rise time to N = 1,061,855 for grip strength. Although heterogeneity was detected, there was consistent evidence in age adjusted models that lower childhood SEP was associated with modest reductions in physical capability levels in adulthood: comparing the lowest with the highest childhood SEP there was a reduction in grip strength of 0.13 standard deviations (95% CI: 0.06, 0.21), a reduction in mean walking speed of 0.07 m/s (0.05, 0.10), an increase in mean chair rise time of 6% (4%, 8%) and an odds ratio of an inability to balance for 5s of 1.26 (1.02, 1.55). Adjustment for the potential mediating factors, adult SEP and body size attenuated associations greatly. However, despite this attenuation, for walking speed and chair rise time, there was still evidence of moderate associations. Conclusions Policies targeting socioeconomic inequalities in childhood may have additional benefits in promoting the maintenance of independence in later life.


Nature | 2012

Genetic contributions to stability and change in intelligence from childhood to old age

Ian J. Deary; Jian Yang; Gail Davies; Sarah E. Harris; Albert Tenesa; David C. Liewald; Michelle Luciano; Lorna M. Lopez; Alan J. Gow; Janie Corley; Paul Redmond; Helen C. Fox; Suzanne Rowe; Paul Haggarty; Geraldine McNeill; Michael E. Goddard; David J. Porteous; Lawrence J. Whalley; Peter M. Visscher

Understanding the determinants of healthy mental ageing is a priority for society today. So far, we know that intelligence differences show high stability from childhood to old age and there are estimates of the genetic contribution to intelligence at different ages. However, attempts to discover whether genetic causes contribute to differences in cognitive ageing have been relatively uninformative. Here we provide an estimate of the genetic and environmental contributions to stability and change in intelligence across most of the human lifetime. We used genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data from 1,940 unrelated individuals whose intelligence was measured in childhood (age 11 years) and again in old age (age 65, 70 or 79 years). We use a statistical method that allows genetic (co)variance to be estimated from SNP data on unrelated individuals. We estimate that causal genetic variants in linkage disequilibrium with common SNPs account for 0.24 of the variation in cognitive ability change from childhood to old age. Using bivariate analysis, we estimate a genetic correlation between intelligence at age 11 years and in old age of 0.62. These estimates, derived from rarely available data on lifetime cognitive measures, warrant the search for genetic causes of cognitive stability and change.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2014

A genome-wide association study implicates the APOE locus in nonpathological cognitive ageing

Gail Davies; Sarah E. Harris; Chandra A. Reynolds; Antony Payton; Helen M. Knight; David C. Liewald; Lorna M. Lopez; Michelle Luciano; Alan J. Gow; Janie Corley; Ross Henderson; Catherine Murray; Alison Pattie; Helen C. Fox; Paul Redmond; Michael W. Lutz; Ornit Chiba-Falek; Colton Linnertz; Sunita Saith; Paul Haggarty; Geraldine McNeill; Xiayi Ke; William Ollier; M. Horan; A. D. Roses; Chris P. Ponting; David J. Porteous; Albert Tenesa; Andrew Pickles; Lawrence J. Whalley

Cognitive decline is a feared aspect of growing old. It is a major contributor to lower quality of life and loss of independence in old age. We investigated the genetic contribution to individual differences in nonpathological cognitive ageing in five cohorts of older adults. We undertook a genome-wide association analysis using 549 692 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 3511 unrelated adults in the Cognitive Ageing Genetics in England and Scotland (CAGES) project. These individuals have detailed longitudinal cognitive data from which phenotypes measuring each individual’s cognitive changes were constructed. One SNP—rs2075650, located in TOMM40 (translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane 40 homolog)—had a genome-wide significant association with cognitive ageing (P=2.5 × 10−8). This result was replicated in a meta-analysis of three independent Swedish cohorts (P=2.41 × 10−6). An Apolipoprotein E (APOE) haplotype (adjacent to TOMM40), previously associated with cognitive ageing, had a significant effect on cognitive ageing in the CAGES sample (P=2.18 × 10−8; females, P=1.66 × 10−11; males, P=0.01). Fine SNP mapping of the TOMM40/APOE region identified both APOE (rs429358; P=3.66 × 10−11) and TOMM40 (rs11556505; P=2.45 × 10−8) as loci that were associated with cognitive ageing. Imputation and conditional analyses in the discovery and replication cohorts strongly suggest that this effect is due to APOE (rs429358). Functional genomic analysis indicated that SNPs in the TOMM40/APOE region have a functional, regulatory non-protein-coding effect. The APOE region is significantly associated with nonpathological cognitive ageing. The identity and mechanism of one or multiple causal variants remain unclear.


Genome Research | 2014

Genetic and environmental exposures constrain epigenetic drift over the human life course

Sonia Shah; Allan F. McRae; Riccardo E. Marioni; Sarah E. Harris; Jude Gibson; Anjali K. Henders; Paul Redmond; Simon R. Cox; Alison Pattie; Janie Corley; Lee Murphy; Nicholas G. Martin; Grant W. Montgomery; Naomi R. Wray; Ian J. Deary; Peter M. Visscher

Epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation (DNAm) are essential for regulation of gene expression. DNAm is dynamic, influenced by both environmental and genetic factors. Epigenetic drift is the divergence of the epigenome as a function of age due to stochastic changes in methylation. Here we show that epigenetic drift may be constrained at many CpGs across the human genome by DNA sequence variation and by lifetime environmental exposures. We estimate repeatability of DNAm at 234,811 autosomal CpGs in whole blood using longitudinal data (2-3 repeated measurements) on 478 older people from two Scottish birth cohorts--the Lothian Birth Cohorts of 1921 and 1936. Median age was 79 yr and 70 yr, and the follow-up period was ∼10 yr and ∼6 yr, respectively. We compare this to methylation heritability estimated in the Brisbane Systems Genomics Study, a cross-sectional study of 117 families (offspring median age 13 yr; parent median age 46 yr). CpG repeatability in older people was highly correlated (0.68) with heritability estimated in younger people. Highly heritable sites had strong underlying cis-genetic effects. Thirty-seven and 1687 autosomal CpGs were associated with smoking and sex, respectively. Both sets were strongly enriched for high repeatability. Sex-associated CpGs were also strongly enriched for high heritability. Our results show that a large number of CpGs across the genome, as a result of environmental and/or genetic constraints, have stable DNAm variation over the human lifetime. Moreover, at a number of CpGs, most variation in the population is due to genetic factors, despite some sites being highly modifiable by the environment.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2010

Caffeine Consumption and Cognitive Function at Age 70: The Lothian Birth Cohort 1936 Study

Janie Corley; Xueli Jia; Janet Kyle; Alan J. Gow; Caroline E. Brett; Geraldine McNeill; Ian J. Deary

Objective: To investigate the association between caffeine consumption and cognitive outcomes in later life. Methods: Participants were 923 healthy adults from the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936 Study, on whom there were intelligence quotient (IQ) data from age 11 years. Cognitive function at age 70 years was assessed, using tests measuring general cognitive ability, speed of information processing, and memory. Current caffeine consumption (using multiple measures of tea, coffee, and total dietary caffeine) was obtained by self-report questionnaire, and demographic and health information was collected in a standardized interview. Results: In age- and sex-adjusted models, there were significant positive associations between total caffeine intake and general cognitive ability and memory. After adjustment for age 11 IQ and social class, both individually and together, most of these associations became nonsignificant. A robust positive association, however, was found between drinking ground coffee (e.g., filter and espresso) and performance on the National Adult Reading Test (NART, p = .007), and the Wechsler Test of Adult Reading (WTAR, p = .02). No gender effects were observed, contrary to previous studies. Generally, higher cognitive scores were associated with coffee consumption, and lower cognitive scores with tea consumption, but these effects were not significant in the fully adjusted model. Conclusions: The present study is rare in having childhood IQ in a large sample of older people. The results suggest that the significant caffeine intake-cognitive ability associations are bidirectional—because childhood IQ and estimated prior IQ are associated with the type of caffeine intake in old age—and partly confounded by social class. BMI = body mass index; FFQ = Food Frequency Questionnaire; MHT = Moray House Test; PCA = Principal Components Analysis; SMS1947 = Scottish Mental Survey 1947; LBC1936 = Lothian Birth Cohort 1936; SES = socioeconomic status; NART = National Adult Reading Test; WTAR = Wechsler Test of Adult Reading.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2015

Cigarette smoking and thinning of the brain's cortex

Sherif Karama; Simon Ducharme; Janie Corley; Francois Chouinard-Decorte; Joanna M. Wardlaw; Mark E. Bastin; Ian J. Deary

Cigarette smoking is associated with cognitive decline and dementia, but the extent of the association between smoking and structural brain changes remains unclear. Importantly, it is unknown whether smoking-related brain changes are reversible after smoking cessation. We analyzed data on 504 subjects with recall of lifetime smoking data and a structural brain magnetic resonance imaging at age 73 years from which measures of cortical thickness were extracted. Multiple regression analyses were performed controlling for gender and exact age at scanning. To determine dose–response relationships, the association between smoking pack-years and cortical thickness was tested and then repeated, while controlling for a comprehensive list of covariates including, among others, cognitive ability before starting smoking. Further, we tested associations between cortical thickness and number of years since last cigarette, while controlling for lifetime smoking. There was a diffuse dose-dependent negative association between smoking and cortical thickness. Some negative dose-dependent cortical associations persisted after controlling for all covariates. Accounting for total amount of lifetime smoking, the cortex of subjects who stopped smoking seems to have partially recovered for each year without smoking. However, it took ~25 years for complete cortical recovery in affected areas for those at the mean pack-years value in this sample. As the cortex thins with normal aging, our data suggest that smoking is associated with diffuse accelerated cortical thinning, a biomarker of cognitive decline in adults. Although partial recovery appears possible, it can be a long process.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2015

Total MRI load of cerebral small vessel disease and cognitive ability in older people

Julie Staals; Tom Booth; Zoe Morris; Mark E. Bastin; Alan J. Gow; Janie Corley; Paul Redmond; Ian J. Deary; Joanna M. Wardlaw

Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) may cause cognitive dysfunction. We tested the association between the combined presence of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features of SVD and cognitive ability in older age. Cognitive testing and brain MRI were performed in 680 older participants. MRI presence of lacunes, white matter hyperintensities, microbleeds, and perivascular spaces were summed in a score of 0–4 representing all SVD features combined. We also applied latent variable modeling to test whether the 4 MRI features form a unitary SVD construct. The SVD score showed significant associations with general cognitive ability. Latent variable modeling indicated that the 4 MRI markers formed a unitary construct, which showed consistent associations with cognitive ability compared with the SVD score. Total MRI load of SVD is associated with lower general cognitive ability in older age. The total SVD score performed consistently with the more complex latent variable model, suggesting validity and potential utility in future research for determining total SVD load.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2014

Childhood cognitive ability accounts for associations between cognitive ability and brain cortical thickness in old age

Sherif Karama; Mark E. Bastin; Catherine Murray; Natalie A. Royle; Lars Penke; S. Muñoz Maniega; Alan J. Gow; Janie Corley; MdelC Valdés Hernández; John D. Lewis; M-É Rousseau; Claude Lepage; V Fonov; D L Collins; Tom Booth; P Rioux; T Sherif; R Adalat; Alan C. Evans; Joanna M. Wardlaw; Ian J. Deary

Associations between brain cortical tissue volume and cognitive function in old age are frequently interpreted as suggesting that preservation of cortical tissue is the foundation of successful cognitive aging. However, this association could also, in part, reflect a lifelong association between cognitive ability and cortical tissue. We analyzed data on 588 subjects from the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936 who had intelligence quotient (IQ) scores from the same cognitive test available at both 11 and 70 years of age as well as high-resolution brain magnetic resonance imaging data obtained at approximately 73 years of age. Cortical thickness was estimated at 81 924 sampling points across the cortex for each subject using an automated pipeline. Multiple regression was used to assess associations between cortical thickness and the IQ measures at 11 and 70 years. Childhood IQ accounted for more than two-third of the association between IQ at 70 years and cortical thickness measured at age 73 years. This warns against ascribing a causal interpretation to the association between cognitive ability and cortical tissue in old age based on assumptions about, and exclusive reference to, the aging process and any associated disease. Without early-life measures of cognitive ability, it would have been tempting to conclude that preservation of cortical thickness in old age is a foundation for successful cognitive aging when, instead, it is a lifelong association. This being said, results should not be construed as meaning that all studies on aging require direct measures of childhood IQ, but as suggesting that proxy measures of prior cognitive function can be useful to take into consideration.

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Ian J. Deary

University of Edinburgh

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Alan J. Gow

Heriot-Watt University

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Simon R. Cox

University of Edinburgh

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Paul Redmond

University of Edinburgh

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