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Is Telomere Shortening a Sign of Cellular Aging?

by Colleen Fleiss on Mar 23 2023 7:10 AM
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Link between chromosome length and biological aging marker discovered. The finding helps explain why people with longer telomeres have a lower dementia risk.

Is Telomere Shortening a Sign of Cellular Aging?
Telomeres’ length is linked to a decreased dementia risk, but not stroke or Parkinson’s risk, revealed study led by Anya Topiwala of Oxford Population Health, part of the University of Oxford, UK, published in the open-access journal PLOS ONE.
Telomeres on chromosomes protect DNA from degrading, but every time a cell divides, the telomeres lose some of their length. Short telomeres are a sign of stress and cellular aging, and are also associated with a higher risk of neurological and psychiatric disorders. Currently, little is known about the links between telomere length and changes that occur in the brains of people with neurological conditions. Understanding those relationships could offer insights into the biological mechanisms that cause neurodegenerative disorders.

Telomere Shortening and Alzheimer's Disease Risk

In the new study, researchers compared telomere length in white blood cells to results from brain MRIs and electronic health records from more than 31,000 participants in the UK Biobank, a large-scale biomedical database and research resource containing anonymized genetic, lifestyle and health information from half a million UK participants. The analysis revealed that patients with longer telomeres also tended to have better brain health.

They had a larger volume of grey matter in their brains overall and a larger hippocampus, both of which shrink in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Longer telomeres were also associated with a thicker cerebral cortex – the outer, folded layer of grey matter – which thins as Alzheimer’s disease progresses. The researchers speculate that longer telomeres might therefore help protect patients from developing dementia, though there was no association with stroke or Parkinson’s disease.

Overall, the findings show that shorter telomeres can be linked to multiple changes in the brain associated with dementia. To date, this is the largest and richest study of the relationships between telomere length and MRI markers in the brain. The associations suggest that accelerated aging in the brain, as indicated by telomere length, could represent a biological pathway that leads to neurodegenerative disease.

Source-Eurekalert


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