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Heritability of intrinsic human life span is about 50% when confounding factors are addressed

Ben Shenhar, Glen Pridham, Thaís Lopes De Oliveira, Naveh Raz, Yifan Yang, Joris Deelen, Sara Hägg, Uri Alon

2026Science19 citationsDOI

Abstract

How heritable is human life span? If genetic heritability is high, longevity genes can reveal aging mechanisms and inform medicine and public health. However, current estimates of heritability are low-twin studies show heritability of only 20 to 25%, and recent large pedigree studies suggest it is as low as 6%. Here we show that these estimates are confounded by extrinsic mortality-deaths caused by extrinsic factors such as accidents or infections. We use mathematical modeling and analyses of twin cohorts raised together and apart to correct for this factor, revealing that heritability of human life span due to intrinsic mortality is above 50%. Such high heritability is similar to that of most other complex human traits and to life-span heritability in other species.

Topics & Concepts

HeritabilityBiologyLife spanMissing heritability problemConfoundingLongevityTwin studyDemographyQuantitative geneticsGeneticsHuman healthHuman lifeEvolutionary biologyLife expectancyAdditive genetic effectsGenetic epidemiologyHuman geneticsGenetic variationGenetic correlationGene–environment interactionHuman genetic variationGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model OrganismsCognitive Abilities and TestingBirth, Development, and Health
Heritability of intrinsic human life span is about 50% when confounding factors are addressed | Litcius