Sunday, February 21, 2010

Lacking Telomeres May Make You Age Faster

Lacking Telomeres May Make You
Age Faster

By Clay Walsh and Dana Berger



Scientists may have made a breakthrough in establishing the cause and speed of biological aging by researching telomeres. Telomeres are DNA pieces on the end of chromosomes which help protect the chromosomes from damage and degrading over time. They are almost padding or protection to the weak DNA inside of them. Some scientists now think that these shrinking as cells divide is the cause of biological aging. First, it is important to know the difference between biological and chronological aging. Biological aging is how your cells are physically after the splitting of these cells. Chronological age merely refers to how long you have actually lived. What these scientists are saying is that someone with smaller telomeres who has lived 45 years may actually have the body of a 55 year old individual.

Scientists from the University of Leicester led by Nilesh Samani actually examined 500,000 genetic variations to find different telomere lengths in the variations. The scientists found a certain variant inside some people that cause them to have shorter telomeres. This variant is actually genetic, and is passed from parent to child. It is like any chromosome with each parent passing one copy down to their child. Previous studies on animals showed that animals with shorter telomeres actually do have faster biological aging. According to scientists, on average, people with one copy of variant are 4-5 biological years older then someone the same chronological age without the variant. Someone with two copies, one from each parent, looks biologically 6-8 years older then someone their chronological age without the variant.

Samani says that it is actually rather common for people to have at least one copy of the variant. He has said "About 7 percent of people carried two copies of the variant, and 38 percent of people [carried] one copy. He also has said that the scientists do not know if people actually look physically older. It seems like it would be difficult to actually tell or judge if they did. Samani has also brought up concerns of early heart disease, as he works as a cardiologist at the university. He has said that shorter telomeres may lead to earlier heart disease, and that very old people chronologically may have perfect heart health, and some younger people chronologically may be at severe risk. This raises large concerns for people who may consider themselves healthy, but actually are at severe risk. It will be very interesting to see if these scientists are able to distinguish older biological people by looks. It also might be a good idea to research a way to create longer telomere transplants for people to prevent premature aging.



The white pieces on the end are telomeres.

Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=aging-telomere
Acknowledgements: Scientific American for writing the first article, and Nilesh Samani and the University of Leicester for conducting the research

2 comments:

  1. This was very interesting. How is it possible for people to age at different paces. I do not think this sounds possible.

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  2. Interesting article. Would lacking telomeres also end your life sooner?

    ReplyDelete