Aging
Telomeres, the DNA strands at the end of chromosomes get shorter as we age. It has now been found that individuals who start with shorter telomeres have a higher risk for certain disease. |
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T elomeres, the DNA end caps are the great predictors of life expectancy: the shorter your telomeres, the shorter your lifespan.
Now, according to new research, that’s not the only thing these fascinating strands of DNA predict. Shorter telomeres also indicate a greater chance for bone marrow failure, liver disease, skin disease and lung disease.
Knowing that, Brigham Young University biologist Jonathan Alder, and other scientists have been manipulating telomeres over the last three decades, trying to figure out ways to extend them and studying mutations within them. Now, a research team Alder is part of has found another link to telomeres and lung disease.
“When we are born, our telomeres are longer. As you get older, they shorten,” said Alder, an assistant professor of physiology and developmental biology at BYU. “What we have found is that if you look at individuals with lung disease, they have shorter telomeres than the rest of us.”
"Most people don't realize that lung disease is the third most common cause of death in the United States," said lead researcher Mary Armanios, associate professor of oncology at John Hopkins University School of Medicine. "Telomere research has its most significant direct public health benefit in the area of lung disease."
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Telomeres are the protective tip of our chromosomes, kind of like the plastic aglet on the end of a shoelace. Each time a cell divides and replicates, the DNA at the end of telomeres shorten. Since cell division happens throughout life, telomeres get shorter and shorter as we age.
"Most people don't realize that lung disease is the third most common cause of death in the United States. Telomere research has its most significant direct public health benefit in the area of lung disease." |
“This a definite Goldilocks situation,” Alder said. “Too little, you age prematurely; too much, you could get more serious diseases. You need to be just right.”
The findings from the research team on emphysema—one of the leading causes of death in the U.S.—are particularly important. The researchers found that a fraction of individuals who develop sever emphysema have mutations in one of the genes responsible for maintaining telomeres. Since mutations in telomere genes are known to cause pulmonary fibrosis, these findings link two diseases that were previously thought to be unrelated. These mutations have implications for future generations too.
“Families with telomere mutations pass those down the line, meaning offspring start off with shorter telomeres,” he said. “With each passing generation the disease gets worse and they get it at an earlier age.”
SOURCE Brigham Young University
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