What is Multi Omics?
by The TruDiagnostic Educational Content Team
Multi Omics, or the Multiome, is a term used to describe the various layers of human biology, and how they interact. As scientists strive to improve the precision and accuracy of biological age calculations (through the development of new, age-calculating algorithms), the importance of factoring in all of these levels is becoming blaringly evident.
Viewing health (along with other physical and cognitive traits that impact our quality of life) through the lens of multi omics allows for an in-depth, complete, and biology-based understanding of what exactly is causing the changes we experience as we age. When scientists program their mathematical algorithms with multi-omic data, biological age predictions are more accurate and actionable for both patients and their healthcare providers.
▐ Biological Aging is Multi-Faceted
Aging starts as molecular, biological processes, and is eventually visible through physical and cognitive traits of deterioration that impact your health and quality of life. From the DNA resting inside your cells' nucleus' to the growth of gray hair resting on your head, the biological journey of aging has several complex pit stops along the way.
The following biological elements and processes make up the multiome, with each layer affected by its predecessor until the trait that was coded in your DNA is finally observable.
For an understandable analogy of these biological functions, you can think of multi omics like baking a dessert. The transformation from a recipe on a piece of paper, to a tangible, edible treat requires multiple steps. Similarly, our DNA alone does not simply produce the observable traits we experience.
▐ Using Multi Omics to Measure Biological Age
Your biological age can be summarized as a calculation of the toll that life has taken on your body. If that sounds enigmatic, that's because it is! Temperature has degrees, weight has kilograms, distance has meters, but what singular unit of measurement can capture biological age? There isn't one!
In order to quantify the biological "toll of time", scientists must 1. be able to link age to different biological patterns that can already be directly measured, and 2. develop a mathematical equation (also known as an algorithm or clock) that examines, filters, and weighs those various age-related measurements in order to determine the overall, biological age of your body.
Each person's genetics, epigenetics, cellular transcriptions, proteins, and metabolites all play a role the aging process, further complicating scientists' ability to narrow in on a single biomarker to determine biological age. That's why it is crucial to zoom out, not in, and examine the interconnected nature of all of these biological markers.
The OMICm Age algorithm, developed in 2023 by scientists from TruDiagnostic and Harvard University, was able to establish correlations between proteins, metabolites, and other clinical measurements with quantifiable methylation patterns. By incorporating these newly established connections into their algorithm, the OMICm Age clock is able to deliver the most accurate results currently available in the epigenetic, scientific community.
▐ Multi Omics Improves Result Accuracy
You can understand the importance of multi omics in determining ones true biological age by thinking like a banker who is decided whether or not to issue a loan. To get a clear picture of the applicant's financial situation, you wouldn't want to only evaluate real estate assets, for example, before making a decision. Sure, real estate assets could be a large and important factor for you to consider, but what about other property assets, business assets, account balances, credit scores, stocks and bonds, income, outstanding debts, debt to income ratios, and more?
By factoring in more (and relevant) data points, your picture becomes clearer and your calculations more precise. This principal also applies to predicting biological age, with multi-omic factors elevating the accuracy of results.
When the Human Genome Project (an initiative to map the entire human genome) was first announced decades ago, many people thought the results would inform us about everything related to human biology. While it was a great project, the actionable health information gained from its efforts left many people disappointed. One reason why is that genetic composition is only one small piece of the puzzle.
We now know that the functionality of your body, as well as your health outcomes (phenotypes), are a result of much more than just your DNA. Your epigenetics and transcriptome, the peptides and proteins in your body (proteome), and the metabolites from your body's processes and environmental exposures are all crucial factors in how your biology operates.